-Viewpoints Grey City JournalWe’re not empty,just self-centeredpage seven NO MORE PURPLE SHIRTSGCJ centerspread-The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 25 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, January 7, 1983Hutch Commons toopen at nightbut menu, services reducedto cut costs; ‘C’ Shop shutPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANChanges in the campus dining room facilities include the use ofdisposable plates and flatware at Hutchinson Commons. Dish¬washing facilities have been shutdown. By Anna FeldmanFaced with decreasing revenuesand increasing overhead, labor,and food costs, the University hasconsolidated the food serviceoperation of Hutchinson Commonsand the “C” Shop.Hutch Commons, as before, nowserves Monday through Friday,but on an extended schedule of 7:30a m. to 7 p.m. The “C” Shop onceopen afternoons Monday throughSaturday, is closed for the foresee¬able future.According to Edward Turking-ton, associate dean of students, themeasure to consolidate the two ser¬vices will dramatically reducelabor costs. Depending on continu-8 candidates vie for aldermanBy Cliff GrammichWith the passing of yesterday’sdeadline for filing petitions for thealdermanic races, the fields for theFourth and Fifth Ward races arenow set. The elections, which arenon-partisan, will be held on Feb22.If no candidate receives a major¬ity of the votes cast in the electionthat day, the two highest finisherswill face a run-off election on Apr.12 to determine the winner.In the Fifth Ward, incumbent Al¬derman Larry Bloom faces sevenchallengers. The candidates, in ad¬dition to Bloom, include SeventhWard Alderman Joseph Bertrand,now a Fifth Ward resident due tothe re-map of the city’s wards fol¬lowing the 1980 census, FrankBacon, Robert Moon, LindberghNorris, Elliott Matthews, RichardLaVert, and Josie Childs.Bloom is running with the back¬ing of Fifth Ward DemocraticCommitteeman Alan Dobry. How¬ever, he does not have the backingof the Fifth Ward Citizens for theDemocratic Party, an organizationmore closely tied to the regular De-moratic Central Committee.Dobry, although a regular Demo¬cratic committeeman, is an inde¬pendent.The Citizens for the DemocraticParty have backed Bacon’s bid foralderman, in addition to backingcandidates slated by the CookCounty Democratic Central Com¬mittee, including Mayor JaneByrne.Robert Moon is running with thebacking of the US Labor Party.Lindbergh Norris is a prominentSouth Shore businessman, owningmany businesses along 71st Street.Elliott Matthews has served as abodyguard for Eighth Ward Aider-woman Marian Humes. JosieChilds is a long-time South Shorecommunity worker.The Fifth Ward includes thatpart of Hyde Park south of 55th Street west of the IC tracks andsouth of 53rd Street east of the ICtracks.Fourth Ward Alderman TimothyEvans also faces seven chal¬lengers in his bid for re-election.They are Ronnie Terry, MuhuriFahara, Maurice Perkins, ExcellJones, Betty B. Booker, ToniPreckwinkle, and Michael W.Smith.Evans, as Fourth Ward Demo¬cratic Committeeman, has the sup¬port of the regular Democratic or¬ganization. Preckwinkle has beenslated by the Independent Votersof Illinois-Independent PrecinctOrganization for the job. Terry hasthe backing of the US LaborParty. The Fourth Ward includes thatpart of Hyde Park north of 55thStreet west of the IC tracks andnorth of 53rd Street east of the ICtracks.Candidates for both the Fourthand Fifth Ward aldermanic seatswill be expressing their views atupcoming forums. On Jan. 11,Fifth Ward candidates will meet ina forum at the Bryn Mawr Commu¬nity Church at 70th and Jeffrey. OnJan. 16, Fourth Ward candidateswill meet in a forum at 5427 S. Dor¬chester. Fifth Ward Aldermaniccandidates will again meet on Feb.3 in a forum sponsored by the HydePark-Kenwood Community Con¬ference. ing patronage, the modified pro¬gram will lower the projected defi¬cit, based on the tendencies of thelast three years.“There’s been a big deficit formany years,” said Turkington, inreference to the combined budgetof the two services. Up until threeyears ago, the University had beenable to reduce the deficit to about$125,000. Two years ago, however,revenues decreased, and continuedin this trend until last November.Turkington said that as of lastmonth, the 1981-‘82 deficit of$75,000 was expected to increase in1982-‘83 to above $100,000 or more.“Our position is that the Univer¬sity can’t sustain an operation withthat high a deficit,” Turkingtonsaid. The University’s responsehas been ‘‘to dramatically reducelabor costs” by both closing the“C” Shop and by restructuring theservices offered at Hutch Com¬mons.While the hours at Hutch Com¬mons have been extended, costshave been cut with the replace¬ment of china, glassware, metalflatware and plastic trays with allpaper goods. By using all dispos¬able utensils, the University haseliminated costs of dishwashingmachinery, maintenance of ma¬chinery, and the cost of extralabor.According to Turkington, thefood service staff has been reducedby 14 full time equivalents, elimin¬ating full time staff by almostthree-quarters. Turkington couldnot give an exact estimate of the actual costs cut in this measure.“The University is trying to finda way to run a service at that loca¬tion that doesn’t require a massivesubsidy, and which meets theneeds of the University communi¬ty,” he said.The consolidation of the twooperations necessitated not onlythe addition of many “C” Shopmenu items to the Hutch Commonsmenu, but the deletion of manyitems previously served as Hutch.While hamburgers, hot dogs, andgrilled cheese are now servedthere, entrees and a variety of hotThe newly renovated Frog andPeach restaurant reopened thisweek undernew management.and cold sandwiches are no longeravailable, said Turkington. Break¬fast will be relatively unaffected,he said, and the salad bar will stillbe offered.Continued on page 21Pat Connelly: UofC’s newest Rhodes scholarBy Jeff TaylorPatricia Connelly, a fourth-yearstudent in the College, has won aRhodes Scholarship for two yearsof study at Oxford. Connelly, 22,who is from Belleville, N.J., is astudent in the Committee on Gen¬eral Studies in the Humanities. Sheis the 23rd student to win the schol¬arship while enrolled at the Uni¬versity of Chicago.Spewing ideas at a rate of threeper second, she bristles with elec¬tric enthusiasm — she says morein 15 minutes than most people sayin a week. Pat Connelly, fourthyear student in the College and re¬cent winner of the prestigiousRhodes Scholarship, is not in thehabit of imposing limitations uponherself.She will study medieval historyat Oxford University, supplement¬ing her undergraduate program: apotpourri of English and GermanLiterature and European History.“My program is unusual,” Con¬nelly told the Maroon. ‘‘It’s veryesoteric, and has a great deal of personal relevancy — its spiritualand political aspects are very im¬portant to me.”Patricia Connelly This, perhaps, is one reason forher selection from a field of 1183national applicants, but, as shesays, “how anybody is selected is amystery.”Connelly submitted a packagelast fall which included a 1000-wordessay, multiple letters of recom¬mendation and transcripts. Sheheard nothing until Dec. 4, whenshe was notified that she wasamong the top ten candidates inthe state.All of her finals were immediate¬ly postponed, as she prepared for aseries of cocktail parties and inter¬views designed to allow the selec¬tion committee to get to know herpersonally. From this reporter’spoint of view, it didn't stand achance.“I got a really good feeling afterthe night of the first cocktailparty,” she says. “The blackpoetess Gwendolyn Brooks was onthe selection committee, and Italked to her about my experienceas poetry editor of the Chicago Re¬view.” After her interview the next day,she was one of two students select¬ed from the state of Illinois.The next step, two days later,was another cocktail party and in¬terview as a finalist in the GreatLakes district of selection. Therewere 11 other finalists.“Everyone was so friendly, butthey asked a lot of hard questions ”Her interview was at 9 a m. thenext morning, and she spent “avery- long day” waiting for the finaldecision that evening“When they announced the twowinners, I didn’t really hear thenames, and ended up congratulat¬ing a lot of the wrong people,” shesaid. “I feel very fortunate, justvery, very fortunate.”Connelly will finish her degree atChicago this June, and will fly toOxford with the other 31 nationalwinners in late September. “Ox¬ford is a boot camp for me. It’s theplace to get a thorough grasp ofmedieval history.”Continued on page 21— I,M- ■ —— ' ■ - 111 'Contacts for Sale!The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses72 How Much Are Your Lenses73 How Much Are Your Lenses74 How Much Are Your Lenses7What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. 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Training Wearing Instructions and Carrying Case)OUR PROMISE TO YOU:If you aren t pleased with your lenses after 60 days cost of the lenses will be re¬funded All contact lens fitting done by our Contact Lens Specialists,Dr S C Fostiak 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. IL 606J4(above County Seat)864-4441 880-5400 Used desks,chairs, files,and sofasBRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8:30-5Sat 9-22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983News in briefNew copy machinesinstalled in librariesAs sharp-eyed students may have noticed,the Vend-a-Copy copy machines all overcampus have been replaced by new ma¬chines from Dual Office Supply Inc.Students who bought “Copicards” can ex¬change them for equivalent “VendaCards”in Dual’s exchange center, first floor Regen-stein until Jan. 21. The center has the samehours as the Cashier’s Office, weekdaysfrom 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Saturdaysfrom 9:30 until 1 p.m.The reason for the switch, according toHoward Dillon, associate director for PublicServices of the University Libraries, is bet¬ter service. “People just weren't getting theservice we know they should be getting,” hesaid.VendaCard prices will be the same asthose of the old Copicards.The total number of copy machines hasbeen reduced from 27 to 25, with one lesscopy machine in both the Regenstein andLaw School Libraries. The new copiers holdcassettes of 1400 sheets of paper, rather thanthe 250 of the old machines, so this reductionwill not make copies scarce.The machines are all brand new, and theDual Office Supply Company provides “themost reliable technical backup,” Dillonsaid.The University does not pay for the co¬piers, but allows the vendors to operate oncampus. This arrangement is satisfactory,Dillon said, as long as Dual makes a reason¬able profit, and the University receivesquality service.Self-defense classesWomen’s self-defense classes, offered byChimera, Inc., will begin in Hyde ParkTuesday, Jan. 11 at the Blue Gargoyle, 5655S. University. Classes will meet 7:30 to 9:30p.m. for six weeks. Chimera offers classes in personal safetyand rape prevention for women regardlessof age or athletic ability. Cost is $35. CallChimera at 332-5540 to register.energy advisory panelWalter E. Massey, director of ArgonneNational Laboratory and vice president forresearch at the University of Chicago, hasbeen appointed to the newly established Uni¬versity Programs Panel of the Energy Re¬search Advisory Board (ERAB).Through ERAB, the panel will advise theUS Department of Energy (DOE) on how itcan best utilize the capabilities of universi¬ties and colleges to further basic and energyresearch. ERAB recently completed a simi¬lar study of DOE’s multiprogram nationallaboratories.The panel will specifically examine therole of universities research and develop¬ment ad the effectiveness of DOE policies concerning the academic community. DOEcurrently provides about $300 million indirect support of university research.Since 1979, Massey has been director ofArgonne and professor of physics at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. He was named vice pres¬ident for research for the University in Oc¬tober. Argonne is managed and operated forDOE by the University of Chicago.$2.3 million for morecancer research hereThe National Cancer Research Institutehas awarded $2.3 million to the University ofChicago Research Center to fund its contin¬uing programs in cancer research, treat¬ment and education over the next threeyears.The federal government designated theUniversity of Chicago as the Midwest’s firstNational Cancer Research Center in 1973 be¬cause of its faculity’s outstanding researchand clinical accomplishments, its high-qual¬ity facilities, and the ability of its scientiststo obtain independently their own peer-reviewed research grants, according to Dr.John E. Ultmann, director of the Universityof Chicago Cancer Research Center.Cancer research at the Medical Centertakes place in its Hospitals and Clinics, theDivision of the Biological Sciences and ThePritzker School of Medicine, as well as at LaRabida-University of Chicago Institute andin the University’s Division of PhysicalSciences. The research programs involvemore than 400 men and women working onhundreds of projects.Major investigations are under way invirology, tumor immunology, cell biology,carcinogenesis, radiation physics, steroidhormone cell surface receptors and manyareas of clinical research.Neighborhood ClubA new series of 8-week adult interestclasses will begin next week at the HydePark Neighborhood Club. Registrations are being accepted at the Neighborhood Club,5480 Kenwood, telephone: 643-4062.“There is something for everyone in thewide variety of classes starting,” said IreneSmith, executive director of the Neighbor¬hood Club. “Adults can enrich their lives inthe New Year by pursuing their special in¬terests.”Classes are scheduled in batik, creativereading and writing, dog obedience, familyhistory, photography critique, and pottery.Also, for health and fitness, there are groupsin aerobic dance, body building, stop smok¬ing, women’s weight control and yoga. Re¬creational volleyball and basketball are onthe agenda for both men and women.Friend suspectedin HP shooting deathThomas E. Green, 38, of 5406 S. MarylandAve. has been arrested and charged with theDec. 24 homocide of Albert Mosby, 33. Ac¬cording to a Chicago police spokesman, theshooting death was the result of a quarrelbetween friends. The two men had beendrinking in the victim’s apartment at 5463 S.Ellis when the quarrel erupted. The suspectfatally shot the victim in the right side of thechest, sometime between 4 and 4:30 p.m. Apossible weapon, a Smith & Wesson revolv¬er, was also found.‘Hand on Clay’displayA free demonstration titled “Hands onClay” will be held at Artisans 21 Gallery inHarper Court, 5225 South Harper Ave. De¬monstrations will take place each Saturdayin January from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.Dorn Ellis, Nan Freund, and MarianneHammett are some of the artists who willgive demonstrations.Artisans 21 is a not-for-profit organizationand is operated by member-artists. In addi¬tion to pottery, other media on display in¬clude photography, weaving, painting,batik, one of a kind kimonos, soft sculpturedolls, handmade paper, papier mache, andstained glass.SAVE ON AFTER-NEW YEAR’SWINE & CHEESE VALUESIH :U1WIRE & CHEESE SHOP FROM $2.00 TO $6.00SALE DATES: January 7th thru January 13thAll items listed below are 750 ml. unless stated otherwise. Delivery available •New Arrival—>m—1 TRAKIA merlotTRAKIA.MfRLOT "The wine discovery of the year.”Judges at the prestigious U.S. In¬ternational food show in New Yorkrecently sampled 150 wines fromaround the world ranging up to$15.00 in price. The unanimouswinner was the smooth andelegant estate bottled Merlot fromMonsieur Henri.FEATURED THIS WEEK AT 2.99■AVAILABLE FOR TASTING-From BordeauxCHOOSE 3 FINE WINESCHATEAU COUFRAN 1979 MedocCHATEAU HAUT CAILLOU 1978 FransacRegularly $6.99or CHATEAU LA ROSE TRINTAUDON 1978MedocRegularly $7.99your choice 5.99 eachSELECTION OF 3 16.50(O.MTERNJOFrom ItalyCONTERNO BARBERAd’ALBA 1979Regularly $6.995.99 From SpainFEDERICO PATERNINABANDA AZUL orBANDA DORADORegularly $4.19YOUR q QQCHOICE: £.99FEDERICO PATERNINA RISERVA 1970Regularly $7.99 NOW 5.99Under $2.00BARBERA d'AST11976 BuratiRegularly $5.99 NOW 1.99SANTA RITA BURGUNDYEstate bottled. Product of Chile . _ _Regularly $3.49 NOW 1.99Jug Wine SpecialsBEAU SOLEIL CUVEESPECIALERed or White Table WineFrom France. 1.5 liters _ _ _Reg $5 90. YOUR CHOICE: 2.99MONTEPULCIANO 1980 Di Abruzzo D O C.or GAMBELLARA 1981 D O C by ZoninRegularty $5.99.1.5 liters. YOUR CHOICE 3.99Beer SpecialsMOLSON GOLDEN, BEER or ALE From Canada6/12oz. N.R. btls. Noticed _Regularty $4.79 NOW 3.49 sale items not included.From PortugalGRAHAM’SPORTO TO KEEP YOU WARM ONTHOSE COLD NIGHTS...GRAHAM S RUBY PORTor TAWNY PORTRegularly $6.99YOURCHOICE: 5.99Cheese, Food & CoffeeSAVE UP TO $1.31 LBJARLSBERG From Norway Reg $4.29FONTINA From Denmark Reg $3.98FARMER’S CHEESEFrom Finland Reg. $3.19USINGER’S ALL BEEF SALAMI Reg $4 29From Wisconsinor IMPORTED WHOLE BEAN COFFEEMOCHA JAVA Reg $4 99FRENCH ROAST Reg $4 99YOUR CHOICE 2.98 lb.r CHALET COUPONCHANSON-r^- Red Tabie Winet'Aafwviw/o coupon $2.99,..*o. Valid thru 1/13/83t; 1 ooupon per customer1.991525 EAST 53rd STREET • HYDE PARK • 324-5000QUANTITIES SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITYThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983—3The University of ChicogoTHE MORRIS FISHBEIN CENTERFOR THE STUDY OF THE HISTORYOF SCIENCE AND MEDICINEGARLAND E. ALLENWashington University"The Several Facesof Darwin:The Heritage ofMechanistic andHolistic Materialismin 20th CenturyEvolutionaryThinking"Jan. 12,19834:00 P.M.SS 122AmericanHeartAssociationWE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE Nominations now beingaccepted forJane Morton andHenry C. MurphyAward ProgramFor Fait QuarterThe Morton-Murphy Award Program has beenestablished to recognize University of ChicagoStudents who have made exceptional contribu¬tions to the University community. Up to fourquarterly awards of $100 each may be presentedas recognition of students’ contribution to ac¬tivities during the Spring Quarter.Students are encouraged tonominate themselves.Pick up applications fromStudent Activities Office,Rm. 210, Ida Noyes Hall.Deadline: Jan. 14 Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesDOES IT MAKE SENSE TO GOTO CHURCH EVERY SUNDAY?It’s hard to explain that, yes, it does make sense. Sunday worshipsometimes looks like dead intellectual freight and oppresive emo¬tional baggage to the “happily liberated,” but for others it is the op¬portunity to hear once again the message that our stubborn mindsnever quite get right: that all are precious, that our gifts must beshared, and that nothing matters much unless it is done with love.Our Sunday worship offers the reminder that God is among us, andthat the good life is found in poverty of spirit and a hunger for justice.We invite all the unchurched at the U. of C. to join us every weekend atCALVERT HOUSECATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER5735 S. UNIVERSITY 288-2311SCHEDULE OF MASSESDaily — Noon and 5:00 pmWeekends — Saturday 5:00 pmSunday 8:30 am11:00 am (Bond Chapel)5:00 pm J\4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983Chess club ties for fourth in Pan- NewsAm Championshiping,” noted A team co-captain Ken Larsen.Eric Schiller also A team co-captain added,“with only Ken not returning, the addition ofone more strong player could easily have uswinning it all next year.”Team preparations include seminars andlectures as well as practice sessions heldduring the year. Team members are select¬ed on the basis of their national ratings or onthe basis of strong results within the club.Club membership is open to anyone withmeetings held 7:30 p.m. Mondays in IdaNoyes. Financial assistance was providedby SGFC and by the Dean of the College.women’s studies seriesBy II Byunand Eric SchillerThe U of C Chess Club returned success¬fully from the 1982 Pan-American Intercol¬legiate Chess Championship tournamentheld Dec. 26-30 in Columbus, Ohio. The Ateam tied for fourth in the nation and fifthoverall. The B team tied for first in the Bcategory and the undergraduate Collegeteam finished third in the small college sec¬tion.Over 100 masters and experts playing forover 60 schools from the US and Canadaplayed in the tournament, sponsored by theIntercollegiate Chess League of Americaand the US Chess Federation. The Pan-Amtournament determines the collegiate Pan-American and US champions.Traditionally, Chicago dominates theevent, holding with the University of Toron¬to the record for most Pan-Am titles (5) andmost consecutive titles (2) as well as the un¬matched record of six US titles. However,Toronto won the tournament this year withBerkeley and Brooklyn College trying forthe national title. The U of C A team, rankedeighth in pre-tournament standings, man¬aged to pass higher ranked Cornell, Utah,Yale, and Harvard to capture fourth place.U of C A started strongly, beating Akronhandily. However, in the second round, itwas upset by another master-expert teamfrom Duke. Chicago recovered quickly, de¬feating Kentucky, Rhode Island, and Brook¬lyn in quick order. In the sixth round a dis¬puted tournament pairing forced Chicago toplay Northwestern while it was off scheduleover its use of reserves. Northwestern man¬aged to draw the match and U of C played astrong Georgia Tech team. Georgia Techgained advantages on several boards butChicago regrouped, then proceeded tosweep 3V2 - V2.Chicago faced an undefeated Torontoteam, which had thus far crushed all opposi¬tion in the last round. With other decisivematches in progress, U of C had to stemToronto’s onslaught in order to preserve ahigh finish. As the match progressed, it be¬came clear that U of C had held Torontoback and a drawn match was agreed upon.The strong performance of the team wasmatched by the play of its players: Ken Lar¬sen held top board opposition to an evenscore, Eric Schiller started slowly thenscored consecutive victories in the last fourrounds, Matt Morris paced the team on thelower boards, and Steve Hudson and TomKang both achieved outstanding scores thatcarried the team.The College team consisted of AndrewKolbert, Marcus Asner, II Byun, and DavidYuen. Seeded third in pre-tournamentstandings, the team finished third behindpre-tournament favorite Swarthmore.Though the team scored many individualpoints, almost upsetting UCLA (fifth in US)and MIT A (15th), it could not put its winstogether except in its sweep of the host OhioState team. Other College team highlightsinclude its decisive win over a strong Uni¬versity of Lowell team and David Yuen’sstrong undefeated performance on board 4. U of C B consisted of Richard Smiley (sta¬tistics), Pierre Cambrisier (GSB), LeonidSagalovsky (College), and Brendan Henry(College). Though U of C B was seededlower and scored fewer individual pointsthan the College team, it was able to coordi¬nate its wins, providing the needed marginto defeat stronger opponents. Its last roundupset of Washington University, St. Louisclinched a tie for the “B” prize with PurdueB.“After our weak performance last year(when Chicago failed to finish in the top 20),finishing high this year was very encourag-Forum sponsorsBy Abby ScherA series of student/faculty seminars, ti¬tled “Approaches to the Study of Women”and a public lecture series on “FeministScholarship and the Academic Disciplines:Critical Perspectives” will be sponsored bythe Forum for Liberal Learning in the Col¬lege. The project, initiated by the Universityof Chicago Women’s Union, is principallyfunded by the Women’s Board of the Univer¬sity of Chicago. The Forum will carry theremainder of the financing.The non-credit seminars will be heldevery other Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in HarperSinaiko: readingBy Kahane CornThe two-day reading period incorporatedinto the fall quarter schedule was consi¬dered a success by Herman Sinaiko, dean ofstudents in the College. While there willmost likely not be another reading periodthis academic year, said Sinaiko, an officialreading period may be institutionalized assoon as next fall.The intention of the reading days this pastquarter was to educate both students andHerman Sinaiko 284 during the winter and spring quarters.Michael Silverstein, professor in the anthro¬pology, behavioral science, and linguisticsdepartments will open the first seminar onJan. 11 with a talk titled “Language andGender Asymmetry: Structure, Usage andIdeology.”The other speakers will be English Profes¬sor Wayne Booth, Political Science Profes¬sor Susanne Rudolph, and Divinity Schoolgraduate student Mary Knutsen. The semi¬nars do not presuppose any knowledge of fe¬minist scholarship and are open to all stu¬dents, faculty, and staff. Recommendedreadings for each session are on reserve atteachers that extra studying time betweenclasses and finals is needed and beneficial,said Sinaiko. This was realized for the mostpart, he said; however, there were com¬plaints and problems with professors sche¬duling exams and classes during readingdays and thus defeating the purpose of thereading period for some students.“Some kids didn't mind because theywanted to get out of town.” Sinaiko said,“but others wanted the extra time tostudy.”He continued, “We did hear about somecases of teachers scheduling exams andclasses during the two days. We had decidedthat only under the circumstances of a unan¬imous vote should any test or class be sche¬duled on one of those days.”In making possible the installment of areading period into the regular U of Cquarter, many options and alternativesmust be studied and explored before anyreal decisions can be made.Sinaiko said that while this exploration it¬self is still only “on the agenda,” some of thealternatives to be considered are: (1) toshorten the 10th week of the teaching periodby two days, resulting in a four-day readingperiod (two during the week and two overthe weekend) or (2) to take one day off of theteaching week and one day off of finalsweek. Before any decisions are made, all al¬ternatives will be thoroughly evaluated anddata from other schools will* be gathered.In terms of last quarter’s reading days,Sinaiko saw indications that students canuse extra days given. In fact, he would liketo see the reading period lengthened still Regenstein Library.The first public lecture in the series willbe given on Feb. 17 by Dorothy E. Smith, vi¬siting professor of sociology from Northwes¬tern University.The student/faculty committee coordinat¬ing this project intends the seminars andlectures to bring scholarly issues related tothe study of women into public debate at theUniversity. The lecture series will bring fe¬minist scholars from outside the Universityto campus to discuss the implications of fe¬minist critical theory for the academic dis¬ciplines. The seminar wall provide interest¬ed faculty members and students with theopportunity to discuss these issues on a reg¬ular basis.The idea for this project grew out of a po¬sition paper that the Women's Union wrotelast winter. The paper called for a “criticalre-examination of the conceptual frame¬works which resulted in the exclusion ofwomen (from scholarly research).” “It isnot enough merely to acknowledge thebiases and lacunae inherent in our academ¬ic disciplines,” it stated, “We must correctand fill them . . . (and) rethink the intellec¬tual assumptions and cultural values thatgenerated them.”In the field of history, feminist scholar¬ship has called into question traditionalperiodization of eras. Although the Renais¬sance may have improved the lot of Europe¬an men, it was a time when women lostmany of the legal rights they held in pre¬vious eras — the right to inherit their fa¬ther’s land, for example. According to thesescholars, the Renaissance was hardly aperiod of “rebirth” for all human beings.The paper asked for more courses con¬cerning women, and the integration of schol¬arship on women into existing courses.Many faculty members expressed their sup¬port of this position. The coordinating com¬mittee believes the lecture series and semi¬nars will focus more attention on theseissues and expose the members of our aca¬demic community to the significant implica¬tions of feminist scholarship.The coordinating committee consists ofElizabeth Helsinger, associate professor ofEnglish; Linda Seidel, associate professorof art; Emily Ooms, advisor in the College;Sally Waack and Abby Scher. fourth-yearstudents in the College: and MadeleineLevin, third-year student in the college.period a successTheFirstTwo STUDENT GOVERNMENT MEETINGS• Thursday, January 13, 7:30, Ida Noyes Sun Parlor• Wednesday, January 19, 7:30, Ida Noyes Sun ParlorCommittee Appointments will be made. All are welcome! OfTheQuarterCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday13181.63rd MU 4-1062 SUNDAY LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustona Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.8:30 o.m. — Sermon 8 Eucharist9:30 o.m. — Sunday School 8 Adult Forum:“The Prophets”10:45 o.m. — Sermon 8 Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person) G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thT#l. H7-9S3SItoMl byLab on prtmitM to* lost *arv«ca trom**raplocod ItntM duplicated ond pca-tcrtpHoni tilled9 The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983—5EditorialsSome changes welcomed,others hard to swallowThe major changes in the campus dining facilities attempt to address twomajor problems, one social and the other economic. The first problem is the lackof a late-night coffee shop outside of Regenstein Library where students can sitdown and eat. The second problem is the mounting deficit in the operation of the“C” Shop and Hutchinson Commons.Late-evening service at Hutchinson Commons is welcomed with much enthu¬siasm. Efforts by Student Government, particularly the Ex Libris GoverningBoard, to establish a late-night coffeeshop on campus outside of Regensteinhave made the University aware of the need for such a service. Soon, students atRegenstein will have an alternative to the overcrowded and rather untidy ExLibris. Furthermore, many students not at the library who may be attendinglate-night activities on campus have a place to sit down and eat.Operating Hutchinson Commons during the late evening will no doubt be anexpensive endeavor, but one we feel well worth undertaking. In order to cutincreasing deficits in the dining hall facilities, the University has made severalchanges.We believe that it was economically wise for the University to consolidate theHutchinson Commons and the “C” Shop operation and to close the “C” Shop.Operating two dining facilities adjacent to each other didn’t make much sense.Furthermore, the “C” Shop facilities could be better utilized for some other pur¬pose.However, the changes in the Hutchinson Commons are for the worse. Pre¬viously, Hutch was the most elegant commons on campus. Wood paneling andhuge portraits have given Hutch the aura of a traditional collegiate commons.But styrofoam plates and plastic flatware simply destroy this pleasant atmo¬sphere. Replacing fried chicken with “chicken gems” and charging for saladsby weight further transforms Hutch from a collegiate dining hall into a fast-foodjoint.The University says that these changes were made in order to cut costs. Thismay be short-sighted. As Hutch loses its charm, it loses its appeal. It may belosing the one advantage it has over the other campus eateries. With the growingpopularity of Morry’s, Cox Lounge, and perhaps even the newly renovated Frogand Peach, Hutch could lose much of its patronage. Over the long run, this wouldaggravate the Commons’ economic problems.While we praise the University’s efforts to meet the students need for a latenight coffeeshop, we find some of the cost-cutting measures adopted a little hardto digest.LettersControllingpest controlDear Mr. Jordan,We are sorry for having taken so long torespond to your November 17, 1982 letterconcerning roach powder application. Wewanted to talk to your building custodian aswell as the powder supplier before we re¬spond to you to make sure that we are fol¬lowing the instructions given by the supplierin the application process.The instruction given to your building cus¬todian was that the powder should besprayed into cracks and crevices, under ca¬binetry and under stoves and refrigerators.Any powder left exposed after applicationshould be carefully brushed into cracks andcrevices or removed. The instruction was followed for the firstapplication of the powder in your apart¬ment. The instruction should have been fol¬lowed in the second application as well, butwas not. No matter what the circumstancesunder which the instruction was not fol¬lowed were, we have reprimanded yourbuilding custodianThe supplier indicated that the active in¬gredient of the powder is ortho boric acidand that ingesting a large quantity (5000 mi-ligrams or more) at one time can be harm¬ful. They also indicated that the active in¬gredient in eye w ash drops is the same boricacid compound.We appreciate your concern and assureyou that those instructions will be followedin the future.Kenneth S. MinnManager-Married Student HousingThe Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. Itis published twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business officesare located on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Telephone753-3263.Darrell WuDunnEditorAnna FeldmanManaging Editor■ Jeffrey TaylorNews EditorWilliam RauchNews Editor Margo Hablutzelfeatures EditorCliff GrammichSports EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorWally DabrowskiProduction Manager Nadine McGannGrey City Journal EditorKeith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditor Ara JelalianPhotography EditorSteve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerStaff: Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, Jeanne Chapman, John Collins, Kahane Corn, Pur-nima Dubey, Maeve Dwyer, Tom Elden, Pat Finegan, Caren Gauvreau, Eric Good-heart, Elisse Gottlieb, Jesse Halvorsen, Joe Holtz, Keith Horvath, Marc Kramer,Linda Lee, Jane Look, Frank Luby, Bill Mudge, Amy Richmond, Yousuf Sayeed,Steve Shandor, Nick Varsam, George Woodbury, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne. LettersHutch‘progress’no advancementTo the editor:Never underestimate the proponents of“progress” to foul things up worse than theywere before. Fried chicken, once the bestmeal at Hutchinson Commons, is “labor in¬tensive” in the words of the University’sFood Service Director. It has to be washedbefore cooking and has been replaced byless appetizing balls of meat called “chick¬en gems.”Servings seem smaller, too, and Hutch isnow determined to weigh your salad dress¬ing lest you get away without paying for ev¬erything. Don’t forget that empty styrofoamcups will be added to your bill — two to threecents extra if you want ice.The new approach to the salad bar causesa cumbersome bottleneck in the middle ofthe kitchen and service is slower and snip¬pier than ever (one poor patron from an¬other country was maligned by a foodserver because of his accent).Washing dishes must be labor intensive aswell because Hutch Commons, once amongthe most physically attractive dining roomson any campus, is now fully stod^d withthrowaway styrofoam cups, flff>wawayplastic plates and utensils, and unsightly,flimsy throwaway cardboard trays. Eatingat Hutch is not the aesthetic experience itonce was.Oddly, Hutch recently had $6000 of newdishes delivered that they now hope to beable to return. These sudden changes wereordered by the Administration and canhardly be popular as labor intensive foodpreparation and service has been eliminat¬ed at Hutch in the name of slower service,poorer food, and incredibly unecologicalwaste. With the closing of the Center forContinuing Education, the old seminary din¬ing room on Woodlawn, and the recent de¬mise of Hutch, it’s becoming increasinglydifficult to find a decent meal on campus.Robert W. KubeyGraduate Student inthe Social SciencesModel UN backTo the editor,I would like to use this opportunity to an¬nounce the rebirth of Model United Nationsat the University of Chicago. The organiza¬tion’s goals have been considerably scaleddown from last year, because I believed thatit is easier to obtain initial administrationsupport for a more limited project than theproject proposed last year. The support Ihave received from the administrators withwhom I have discussed the project, indi¬cates that there will be Model UN activity this year. The first event will be sponsoringa delegation to the Midwest Model UN, at St.Louis, Feb. 23-26, 1983. There will be an or¬ganizational meeting tomorrow, Saturday,Jan. 8 in the Ida Noyes Hall Library at 10:30a.m. If anyone is interested in going to theSt. Louis conference, attendance tomorrowis mandatory.Michael AronsonPresident UCMUNOStop US aidto El SalvadorTo the editor:US military aid to El Salvador must stop.Already the university community has ex¬pressed its concern on this issue: in theSpring of 1981, over 2500 U of C faculty, stu¬dents and staff petitioned for the suspensionof all military aid due to gross and continu¬ing violations of human rights in El Salva¬dor. This petition was then presented toRep. Harold Washington.Since that Spring over 15,000 additionalmurders were committed in El Salvador,bringing the total for the past three years to36,000. The Catholic Church attributes thevast majority of these murders to govern¬ment forces. Now the dimensions of thetragedy approach farce: at the end of thismonth Ronald Reagan intends to certify toCongress that El Salvador is improving itshuman rights record and thus qualifies forcontinued military aid. Amnesty Interna¬tional, the ACLU, the Human Rights Com¬mission of El Salvador, and the Archbishopof San Salvador all insist that human rightsviolations have not declined.What can we do? Politically and morally,we must be even more outspoken than in thepast. We especially need to protest Reaganadministration policies in light of the recentsupport given those policies by twomembers of the U of C community: Secre¬tary of State Shultz, former business schooldean, and Senator Percy, a University trust¬ee. During the next two weeks you will havethe opportunity to sign an open petition con¬demning US support of El Salvador’s mili¬tary regime, and to contribute toward thepetition’s publishing costs.Our University is a consortium of diverseintellectual perspectives. Despite the exis¬tence of many viewpoints, the majority of usat the U of C share a deep concern over thebrutal violation of human rights in El Sal¬vador, and of US support for its military re¬gime. We therefore urge every member ofthe University community to join in thecoming petition drive. If you would like tohelp, contact Hugh or Catherine at 288-8722,or David at 241-6132.CAUSE(Committee Assembled to Unitein Solidarity with El Salvador)6—-The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983ViewpointsTo Allan Bloom: we’re not empty, just self-centeredBy David BrooksThe windows in Social Sciences 506, from which AllanBloom looks out on my generation of university students,are deformed. They distort his view. The light cast by stu¬dents who pass by is refracted into a cliche and their pri¬vate affairs are rendered invisible. Mr. Bloom’s tendencyto underestimate the depths of our emotions and the profun¬dity of our curiosities mars an otherwise courageous andimportant article he wrote for the National Review a fewweeks ago.The article, titled, “Our Listless Universities,” is an ex¬planation of the vacuity of today’s university students. Mr.Bloom places the blame firmly on universities like this one.He argues that it has become the goal of our universities notto help us form convictions but to teach us to be open to thewidest possible variety of cultures, values and lifestyles:Schools once produced citizens, or gentlemen, or be¬lievers; now they produce the unprejudiced. A uni¬versity professor confronting entering freshmen canbe almost certain that most of them will know thatthere are no absolutes and that one cannot say thatone culture is superior to another.Professors, fearing prejudice above all things, “have tacit¬ly agreed not to open Pandora’s box and start a civil war”by questioning this belief. They never challenge us to deter¬mine which lifestyle is good and which is evil, and theyavoid any possibility of having us judge each other or our¬selves. Their jobs, they seem to believe, is to introduce us toa few opinions and facts and hope that somewhere along theline we will decide for ourselves what we like and don’tlike.The result, Mr. Bloom continues, is that universities havelost their vision. The “general purpose is lost amid the inco¬herent special purposes that have accreted within it.” Theprofessional schools offer money and prestige, but for stu¬dents who take this route, “the liberal education is practi¬cally over.” The natural sciences thrive but are more spe¬cialized than ever. They have no need for the rest of theuniversity and don’t object to liberal eduction “if it doesn’tget in the way of research and training.” The socialsciences, meanwhile, “are theoretically barren, and the lit¬erature used by them is mostly the ephemera of the lastfifty years.” And among the humanists, the supposed pur¬veyors of the great ideas, Mr. Bloom sees a crisis in con¬fidence: “The students are abandoning them and they havedifficulty speaking to the concerns of the age. . .In theirheart of hearts, many doubt that they have much to say.”Having abandoned the search for absolute truth, universi¬ties have, camouflaged under the mass of disciplines andsubdisciplines, a huge and crippling abyss.The product, Mr. Bloom concludes, is my generation:“Students in our best universities do not believe in any¬thing, and those universities are doing nothing about it. Aneasygoing American kind of nihilism has descended uponus. . The great questions — God, freedom and mortality,according to Kant — hardly touch the young.” The order ofthe day is to do your own thing and let others do theirs. Theresult is what Saul Bellow calls “easy virture,” a hollow“mixture of egotism and high mindedness” made possibleby a lack of substantive morality. “There are no abso¬lutes,” Mr. Bloom laments, “freedom is absolute.”The inability to discriminate has exacerbated the demo¬cratic tendency toward aimlessness: “The palliation of be¬lief culminates in pallid belief.” Without any convictions,we jump from desire to desire, from fad to fad, from role torole. In the end, we find that our only achievement has beento create “an artificial soul to replace the old one supplied by nature, which was full of dangerous longings, love,hates, and awes.”Mr. Bloom’s observations on the state of American edu¬cation are on target. This mass of ever-specializing disci¬plines is an ivory tower built on sand. And the goals of thisuniversity, at least, are as diffuse as they are gentle. Stu¬dents here receive a eunuch education. Teachers informand interest but they rarely provoke and they almost neverdirectly challenge or infuriate. We are treated as fragilepieces of china or as lemmings. W'e might bruise if calledupon the carpet for our own thoughtlessness but wewouldn’t break. And should a professor push his eccentricviews in our face, we might be enlightened but we wouldn’tfollow him over a cliff because of them.Mr. Bloom is also right when he says that few of us be¬lieve in absolutes anymore. I think I was echoing commonsentiment when I wrote in a “Striking Out” column lastquarter, “Truth is the wings a dope fiend thinks he haswhen he jumps off the roof.”But Mr. Bloom is wrong when he asserts that our rela¬tivism leads to aimlessness. Logically, it doesn" follow thata priest in 20th century America who works closely withclerics of other faiths is any less devout than a priest whohelped orchestrate the Inquisition in 15th century Spain. Anempirically, it is certainly not true that “Students in ourbest universities do not believe in anything.” And it is herethat I think I know more about my own generation than Mr.Bloom does.Mr. Bloom treats our relativism as a negative attribute,as a lack of belief in absolutes. Relativism to him is not aphilosophy but a “dogma.” It does not persuade, it “ap¬peals.” And the people it appeals to most, according to Mr.Bloom, are “southern snobs” and “Stalinists,” people whohave an interest in weakening our democracy. It onlycaught on, he seems to suggest, because it was politicallyfeasible to a wide variety of splinter groups.In reality, my generation believes in relativism becausewe think it is true. It is a dearly held conviction and it car¬ries all the baggage of one. Going through the CommonCore we gleaned its roots from the writings of Hobbes(“For the thoughts are to desires, as scouts and spies, torange abroad and find the way to the things desired”) andBurke (“We are afraid to put men to live and trade each onhis own stock of reason because we suspect that this stockin each man is small”). Instilled with this distrust of ourown minds, and faced with the awful complexity of theworld, we find it absurdly presumptuous to tell a man whohas responded to our longings in a different way that he iswrong and we are right.Our relativisim, our tolerance, doesn't destroy moralrules or the notions of good and evil, or even God. It merelytakes those beliefs which were hitherto engraved in a loftytablet for all to follow, and makes them matters of privateconcern. Unable to determine the truth, we can at least in-tuite my truth.The search for truth is quiet these days, and more person¬al. There’s no emphasis on blustering your truth to yourneighbor, which might explain our inability to hold intelli¬gent conversations. It just seems silly telling somebody“the way it is” and frankly, I feel silly right now writing allthis down.Mr. Bloom does not seem to notice this silent inquiry; heassumes it isn’t there. Similarly, Mr. Bloom doesn’t see theprofundity of our generation’s medium of expression, rockmusic; erroneously, he assumes it isn’t there. In the Na¬tional Review article Mr. Bloom calls rock music the most“powerful formative influence on children between 12 and18.” To that extent, he is right. Last year I wrote an articlein the Grey City Journal trying to explain why rocker BruceSpringsteen had affected me more than any of the geniuses I’d studied here at the University. My friends could havewritten similar articles on Springsteen or on a dozen otherrock stars. Those articles would have confirmed Mr.Bloom’s estimation of the power of rock and they wouldhave indicated that he need not have limited himself to peo¬ple under 18.But how does Mr. Bloom think rock affects us?It’s beat goes to the depths of their souls and inarti¬culately expresses their inarticulate longings. Thoselongings are exclusively sexual, and the beat appealsalmost exclusively to that. It caters to kiddy sexuali¬ty, at best to puppy love.That rock is exclusively sexual is an assertion I’ve heardover and over again but have never seen supported. Any¬body who listens to rock and who is conversant in its formsknows that this is nonsense, particularly today. The pri¬mary longing expressed in good rock is for justice, for fair¬ness. Certainly there are groups whose appeal is sexual, butamong the artists who matter — Elvis Costello. The Clash.Springsteen, Pete Townshend, Stevie Wonder, John Len¬non. Billy Joel, Grand Master Flash, the entire punk androckabilly movements — there is practically no appeal tosex. Rock is passion: political passion, moral passionthwarted passion as well as romantic and sexual passion.These tremendously talented artists are not the “banal,drug-, and sex-ridden guttersnipes who foment rebellion notonly against parents but against all noble sentiments”which Mr. Bloom says they are. They are intelligent, young(and sometimes not so young) men and women writing inthe predominant art form of their generation. Rock starsare exploring very personal responses to the “dangerouslongings, loves, hates, and awes” which Mr. Bloom saysmake up our natural souls' Their messages are not framedin rational terms, but they are understood by their audi¬ence. To condemn them as Mr. Bloom does is a prime ex¬ample of the sort of mean-spirited intolerance which resultsfrom Mr. Bloom's insistence on constant discrimination,and ignorance.Our highly personalized search for truth is not without itsdrawbacks. It makes it far easier to ignore moral and phi-losphic questions in the face of easily solved economic andscientific ones. There's no one standing over us to insist thatwe concern ourselves with equal opportunity when we re fi¬guring out a theory of monetarism.Literary critic George Stiener is frightened by our “ob¬session with privatism” and our tendency to narrow theworld down to our own experience. But we can't toss out ourconviction that we have no right to judge another man's lifesimply because it isn’t feasible. That would be to sufferfrom the very convictionlessness Mr. Bloom accuses usof.Nor do I mean to argue that each of us has spinningaround in our heads profundities of awesome magnitudeFrankly, I think it's a little unfair of Mr Bloom to expect20-year olds to have advanced ideas on their own mortality.But the fact remains that, though inconspicuously, we arefacing all the issues Mr. Bloom would have us face. A quickcheck-up might indicate a generation of sick souls, but athorough exploratory would reveal souls in the best ofhealth.I wrote this essay, at the tremendous risk of sounding pre¬tentious, because the problem Mr Bloom sees in our un¬iversities would have created a generation of mindless zom¬bies were it not for the indominable human curiosity. As itstands, the easygoing nebbishness of our educational sys¬tem must be eliminated. As for Mr Bloom’s opinions on ourrelativism: Hey! Who am I to judge? If relativism doesn'twork for him, well, that’s cool. In the words of Mario Thom¬as, Let’s all be free to be you and me.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1988—7WAITEDALIVE!Reward For Information Leadingto the Betterment of Chicago's "#1 ROCK AND ROLL Radio Station.Now it's The Loop's Turnto Listen to You!REWARDA Special Edition Black and Gold Loop Pin, plus a Chanceat Thousands of Dollars in Prizes in a Random Drawing.FILL OUT AND SEND TO THE LOOP. 875 N. MICHIGAN AVE..CHICAGO. IL 60611 WITH A SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED ENVELOPEAge: C Under 20 □ 20-30 C 31 +1) Where do you live? G City2) Whet is your favorite type of music?□ Soft Rock C Classical□ Urban Contemporary Jazz3) What are your three (3) favorite artists/groups?1)2)3) Sex: □ Male □ FemaleSuburbs □ Outside IllinoisCountry C Beautiful MusicAlbum Rock L Top 404) What three (3) artists/groups are you tired of hearing on the radio?1)2)3)5) Rate on a scale of 1-7 what mix of music you would like to hear on the radio? (circle one number)Current Music Even Mix Oldies1 2 3 4 5 6 76) Rate the stations on a 1-10 scale, ten (10) being your favorite(s):WBBM-FM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WCLR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WFYR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WKQX I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WLS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (circle one number lor each station)WLS-FM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WLUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WMET 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10WXRT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 107) What is your favorite radio station?A) Where do you do most of your listening?□ At home □ In the car □ At work8) What are the two most important reasons you listen to the radio?1) 2)9) Do you like to hear the news on the radio?10) Do you like to hear sports reports on the radio?11) Do you change radio stations when you hear news/sports on the radio?12) What do you like least about radio? □ Yes □ No□ Yes □ No□ Yes G No13) Is there any radio station you're listening to MORE now than you did three months ago?□ Yes □ No If so, why?14) Is there any radio station you're listening to LESS now than you did three months ago?□ Yes □ No If so. why?15) Do you listen to the radio for contests?16) Do you participate in radio contests?17) What are your three favorite contests you have heard on the radio? □ Yes□ YesWhich Station?Which Station?Which Station?18) When you hear a contest on the radio, does it make you change stations?19) What are your three favorite TV shows?1) 2) 3) LJ No□ No□ Yes □ No20) Other than playing even fewer commercials than any other station, what would you do to make theLOOP FM 98 a better radio station?NameAddressCity State ZipTHE LOOP 875 N. MICHIGAN AVE. CHICAGO, IL 60611 THANK YOU! Rockefellerel9 amEcumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 amUniversity ReligiousServiceBernard 0. BrownDean of the Chapel CAMPUSSUBSCRIPTIONS TO<$)e?Vreiu|forkiSme#are now available at a 30% discount rateprice. (Discount only for weekday paper.)Newspapers are available by 8:00 a.m.or?the day of publicationwhen classes are insession. Daily discount rate is 35*Sunday papers are available on a subscrip¬tion basis also, but no discount is given.(Sunday papers will be available for pick upafter 8:30 a.m. on Monday with Mondaysissue.)Your paper can be guaranteed for the firstday of service on Jan. 10 only if payment isreceived by Jan. 6th. Any orders receivedafter Jan. 10th will be prorated according tothe number of delivery days left in the term.Please mail or drop off the bottom portion ofthis slip to:The University of Chicago BokstoreGeneral Books Department970 East 58 StreetChicago, Illinois 60637Count me in for The Now York Time*! I will subscribe5 days 6 days 7 days Sunday onlyEnclosed is my check for$Please make checks payable to The Universityof Chicago Bookstore, General BooksDepartment.WINTER TERM-onds March 18Mon-Fri. *17 50Mon-Sat *20 65Mon-Sun. *43.15Sun only *22 50SPRING TERM-March 28-June 10Mon-Fri. *18 90Mon-Sat *2205Mon-Sun *44 55Sun only *22 50There will be no delivery during exam week and holidaysName AddressNORTHWESTERN’S MASTERSPROGRAM IN JOURNALISMThe Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University offersa tradition of excellence. Aspiring journalists will find Medill has apractical program designed to encourage students to learn by doing.Students are taught in three settings. In Evanston, classes meetregularly, often using urban and suburban resources for class projectsand news stories. In downtown Chicago, newspaper and broadcaststudents use the city as a laboratory and produce deadline storiesin a bustling newsroom facility. And in Washington, D.C., newspaperstudents cover the nation’s capital for client newspapers while broad¬cast students appear on local news stations across the country asW ashington correspondents.MEDILLMedill offers specific training for those interested in reporting andwriting, newspaper management, magazine management, broadcastjournalism, and advertising.A recruiter will be at the Career Counseling and PlacementCenter, 5706 University Ave., Wednesday, January 12 from9 a.m. to 4:50 p.m. to talk more about the program. Those interestedin financial aid will benefit by the interview. Contact your careerplanning center if you are interested.If you cannot attend this session, write for further information:Medill School of Journalism,1845 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Illinois 60201or call 492-52288—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983&.£/. r> /a| /.&H^Z6£SV 7 January 1983 • 15th Yearby Vince MichaelIn Europe the streets and buildings manifest acollective memory over a thousand years old. Yetthe most fascinating aspect of European cities is notthe contrast with American cities, but the internalcontradictions which perplex the foreign traveler.I stayed in atemporary youth hostel inAmsterdam, one which was situated on a boatdocked in the bay between North and SouthAmsterdam. I was comfortable, for the swell andpitch of the ocean filtered into the harbor androcked me gently to sleep my three nights here. Butthere is also something uncomfortable and excitingabout sleeping on a boat—something which remindsme of the verve of this strangely antique, decidedlymodern, perverse and austere city. Here a thousandstreetside cafes offer pastries, espresso and beernexttoan equal numberofsex shops purveyingfoods of latex, celluloid, silk and leather. It is a cityof tastes. Gothic cathedrais of massive size fillwithout encumbering next to subway stations,government buildings and squatters’ tenementsfrosted with the multicolored desserts ofAmsterdam's spray-painting young and rootless.Bland Dutch cooking is forsaken for the spicier foodsof Indonesia, India and the Middle East. At everyturn it is a city that promises to fulfill; advertisesand proposes to sell fulfillment.This may make it the ultimate city: a massivemarket for social, sexual, and psychological needs,serving—as it has for hundreds of years—aworldwide hinterland, whose rural marketplacescannot rival the insistent technicolor flesh ofAmsterdam. Chicago is a particularly tellingcounterexample. Amsterdam is not the city thatworks, but the city that cheats, that prostitutesitself and seems to say not “I Will” but*‘I Must.”While Chicagoans are isolated in localneighborhoods, Amsterdammers are endlesslyfleeing across the bridges over the canals which cutthis city into a thousand tiny islands, a thousandboats floating tenuously in dock. Its centralmonument is not a graceful Calder, a regal lion, oran evasive Picasso, but a stark and phallic whiteobelisk, adorned with thick naked men in boldpostures. And beneath the monument there aregathered thin, slouching dark men with pleasures tosell. The graffitti on the walls of Amsterdam is notof street gangs, but individuals: the encircled A ofanarchy is seen a hundred times a day. Food here istaken quickly, raw fish in streetside stands, Dutchgin in outdoorcafes, and the fast foods of themyriad restaurants residing blithely within theconfines of the famous Red Light District.Its textures are as strong as its tastes. TheWaterloosplein flea market boasts racks of leatherjackets and zippered miniskirts rather than oldtweed suitcoats and plaid ties. Leopard and tigerprints bedeck Amsterdamers from eleven to fifty,proclaiming a raw sensuality that stands in shockingcontrast to the stately Rijksmuseum of staidportraiture: elegant 17th century clocks, andantique faces combed and pampered forRembrandt’s delicate deep tones, nestled in collarsof lace and grand satin sashes.Perhaps the city needs strong tastes and texturesto assure the senses that it lives, to provide a drugthat removes one from the fact that this city is adocked boat, bending with the pitch and sway ofhuman desires, coursing through its hundredcriss-crossing canals, feeling that it is in danger offearing thatand the great port citysinking beneath thea rope somewhere will AFLOATIN AMSTERDAMwill drift away. Anarchy and the fear of oblivionare here being lived at every moment and everymeal is a last supper, every sexual encounter afrenzied futility, enacted hungrily and hatefully onthe desert islands between the waterways.I spent two days here without visiting any of the“hot” nightspots, like the Melkweg (Milky Way)where drugs are sold over the bar. I felt withdrawn.Conservative. I wondered then and now what mademe, a self-proclaimed apostle of Sex Anarchy, shyand uncomprehending of a city defined by Sex andAnarchy. And after I had finally bought a tiger-printshirt in the Waterloosplein, and learned my wayaround the maze of sleazy streets and dirty canals, Imet a man who was “down on his luck.” He had aDutch mustache and sideburns, a pot belly, no upperfront teeth, and a beaten, pleading expression. Hesaid he was born in America, knew elevenlanguages, and had been robbed two days before.He offered to buy me a beer and said he was verysad would I just talk to him. So I talked, but he wasdistracted by fatigue and perhaps helplessness. Heasked if l could help him out, since he had beensleeping in the streets for two days. I offered to buyhim cigarettes and lied that I couldn’t afford to givehim money for a bed even though he offered to payme back when he got his passport and returned tohis home in Munich. I still have his address. Hethanked me for the cigarettes and left. I wasmixed-up, feeling guarded and ashamed, dim amidstinsistent lights red and demanding. And a mannamed Carlos who had no teeth was left adrift andAmsterdamoo ..JSfe lOICi-The long-awaitedre-issues of theHAROLDThe Tradition of theThe Anxious ObjectArtworks &SEMINARYBOOKSTORE5757 S. UNIVERSITYMONDAY-FRIDAY 9:30-6 Asian Artsin cooperation with International HousepresentsBHARAT SHARMAin a program of Traditional & ModernDANCE OF INDIAFriday, January 7, 8 pmAssembly Hall - International House1414 East 59th StreetAdmission FreeThe Public Is Cordially InvitedPUBLIC POLICYLECTURE SERIESThe first three lecturesof Winter Quarter 1983:Professor Aaron Wildavsky Wednesday, January 12(Survey Research Center, University ** 3:30-5:00of California, Berkley) Wiebolt 303“THE TRANSFORMATION OF BUDGETARY NORMS”Jointly sponsored by the Committee on Public PolicyStudies and by the American Politics and InstitutionsWorkshop of the Department of Political Science.Jane M. Byrne Thursday, January 13Mayor of the City of Chicago 4:00-5: 3QBreasted Hall, OrientalInstitute“THE FUTURE OF CHICAGO”Richard M. Daley Thursday, January 20State’s Attorney 4:00-5:30Breasted Hall, OrientalInstitute“THE FUTURE OF CHICAGO”Students, faculty, andthe general public are invited.y 11 t i t rn t i tit r tit i~kTonight at 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00 pm. And Saturday at 2:30 pm.Captain Kirk encounters life’s creation, midlife's crisis, andRicardo Montalban in STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN.Directed by Nicholas (Time After Time) Meyer. 1mm Saturday at 7:00 and 9:30 pm. Jean-Jacques Beineix's spiritedthriller, DIVA (or the film Godard would have made if he’dbeen happy).mm Sunday at 8:00 pm. Stepfather and child in a sexy French farce.BEAU PERE. Directed by Bertrand (Get Out Your Handkerchiefs)Blier.All Films in Cobb Hall, 5811 S. EllisSeparate $2.00 admission for all shows.Phone 962-8575 for more information.: Y •••■••••••• »*•-*•/ to •-r*. , X^nor FILMS.\ I I I I 1 I 1 Jw i "*,y,7,v.r* .a*i« 1 .«i. -r-,W 7-FRIDAY, JANUARY &, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL 5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARK0pEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails* Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!" — Chicago Mogozlno, March 1977-P n/£■!**£ /V C/ifCAdC ART:~ A " I■JANI/AK* <f - „HYBE PARK „ 1701 £. a pen in «Am cemm n 53/Jit. Jan. 9 $J%fgBftw\r?y /$MISCApproaches to the Study of Women Pro¬fessor Michael Silverstein will speakon Language and Gender Asym¬metry: Structure. Usage, and Ideo-•ogy,” the first evening of thisquarter's student/faculty seminar onthe study of women and feministscholarship. Tues Jan 11 at 7:30 pm,Harper 284.FILMStar Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (NicholasMeyer, 1982) Fri Jan. 7 at 7, 9, and11 pm; and Sun Jan 9 at 2:30 pm. Doc.$2Diva (Jean-Jacque Beineix, 1981) SatJan 8 at 7 and 9:30 pm. Doc. $2Beau Pere (Bertrand Blier, 1981) SunJan 9 at 8 pm. Doc. $2An American in Paris (Vincente Minelli,1951) Sun Jan 9 at 8:30 pm. LSF. $2Badlands (Terrence Malick, 1973) MonJan 10 at 8 pm. Doc. $1.50La Guere est Finie (Alain Resnais, 1966)Wed Jan 12 at 7:30 pm. I-House. $2Burden of Dreams Les Blank’s documen¬tary about Werner Herzog's makingof Fitzcarraldo in the jungles of Peru,returns for a week to Facets Multime¬dia, 1517 West Fullerton, Fri Jan 7through Thurs Jan 13 Admission $3,$2 for Facets Members. (218-4114)Sartre Par Lui-Meme Directed by Alex¬andre Astrucard and Michel Conant,this is a three hour documentaryabout the life, philosophy, and poli¬tics of Jean-Paul Sartre, consisting ofdiscussions among Sartre, Simone deBeauvoir, and a group of French in¬tellectuals. as well as some footageof St. Germain de Pres during the1950's, when Sartre, de Beauvoirand friends frequented cafes on theLeft Bank of Paris, developing an ex¬istentialist philosophy. Facets Multi-media, 1517 West Fullerton, Fri Jan 7at 8 pm. $3.50, $2.50 for Facetsmembers. (281-4114)Rediscovering French Film A fifty-filmretrospective of French cinema from1939 to 1960. featuring works fromthe beginning of the sound erathrough the origins of the New Wave.Films both by major figures such asJean Renoir, Abel Gance, Max Or-phuls, and Jean Cocteau, as well asby less known directors such as JeanGremillon, Marcel L'Herbier, JaquesBecker, and Yves Allegret. All filmsin French with English subtitles. TheFilm Center of the School of the ArtInstitute, Columbus Drive at JacksonBoulevard, Wed Jan 12 through theend of March. For further informa¬tion. call 443-3733.MUSICMonty Adams will give a flute recital,accompanied by Thomas Zeman,piano. They will perform works byBach, Kreisler, Prokofiev and Saint-Saens. Goodspeed Recital Hall, SunJan 9 at 4 pm. Free.CCP Recital with Elsa Charlston SopranoElsa Charlston will give a recital withLambert Orkis at the piano. She willbe assisted by Carol Morgan, flute,and Howard Sandroff, electronicsWorks to be performed include Sha-pey’s Three Songs for Soprano andPiano; Eaton's A Greek Vision; Pou¬lenc’s La Courte Paille; Haydn's Reci¬tative and Aria from the Cantata‘‘Miseri Noi, Misera Patria;” andBrahm’s Songs. Mandel Hall, TuesJan 11 at 8 pm. Free.Chicago Chamber Orchestra opens its31st season with a program begin¬ning with Mozart’s “Symphony No. 31 in D Major” k. 297, guest conduct¬ed by Charles Picklar of the CSO.Regular conductor and Music Direc¬tor, Dieter Kobes, will conduct the or¬chestra in J.S. Bach’s “BrandenburgConcerto No. 5." In commemorationof Richard Wagner, the orchestrajoins the music world’s “WagnerYear” by performing the “SiegfriedIdyll.” Main Auditorium of the Muse¬um of Science and Industry, Sun Jan 9at 3:30 pm. Admission is Free.(922-5570)Muir String Quartet Featuring JosephGenualdi, violin; Bayla Keyes, violin;Steven Ansell, viola; and MichaelReynolds, cello. Works to be per¬formed are Haydn’s Quartet in EMajor, Op. 54, No. 3; Bartok’s SixthQuartet; and Ravel’s Quartet in FMajor. Sponsored by the ChamberMusic Council of Chicago. The WorldPlayhouse, Mon Jan 10 at 8:15 pm.For tickets and information about theCouncil’s other concerts this season,call 663-1628.ARTThe Big Pitcher: 20 Years of the Ab¬stracted-figure in Chicago Art. Ashow of 34 works by 20 artists basedon the premise that the abstracted fi¬guration of the human form has beenand is an important and shared con¬cern of Chicago painters and sculp¬ tors — a preoccupation that is sup¬posed to transcend age, school, andstyle. The works are new, so weshould not expect a reshuffling of oldevidence; the styles are different, sowe should not expect a coherent Chi¬cago ‘look’. Deconstruction wow.Opens Sun 9 Jan 5-8 at The HydePark Art Center, 1701 E 53rd.Through 19 Feb: Tue-Sat, .11-5.324-5520. Free. —DMJeff Wall: Selected Works Huge backlitcolor transparencies. A recent appre¬ciation uses the artist’s pointed em¬phasis on technique as evidence ofthe art’s criticism of its own madestatus and, by extension, of photo¬graphy and modernist art in general.Perhaps this is the artist's intention,and perhaps if the photographs hadminds they would have this opinionof themselves, but the use of coloralone inclines one to expect this notto be the case. Opens Sun 9 Jan, 5-7at The Rennaissance Society, fourthfloor Cobb. Through 20 Feb: Tue-Sat,10-4; Sun, noon-4 . 962-8670. Free.— DMPoetry on the Wind: The Art of ChineseFan Painting from the Ming andCh’ing Dynasties. Seventy-four Chin¬ese fans from the 15th through the19th centuries embellished with po¬etry (untranslated) and painting oflandscapes and other natural sub¬jects. A quiet show, possibly a goodone: potential reviewers should con¬tact the grey city. Through 20 Feb atthe Smart Gallery, 5550 S. Universi¬ty. Tue-Sat, 10-4; Sun, noon-4.753-2123. Free.Moment of Impact: Paintings anddrawings by Paul Santori. Opens to¬night, 5:30 at Midway Studios, 6016S Ingleside. Through 20 Jan: Mon-Fri,9-5. 753-4821. Free.Bob Gordon: Graphics and Illustrations“Featuring drawings from Valois.”Opens Sun 9 Jan, 6-8 at the YoungerGallery, 1428 E 53rd. Through 12Feb: Mon-Fri, noon-9; Sat. 10-6; Sun,noon-G. 752-2020. Free.Art on the Edge Drawing, painting,prints, photographs, and installation by 15 Chicago-area artists show the“contemporary experience”. In RawSpace, the aptly-titled “In the Base¬ment”, an installation by sculptor De¬borah Peterson: “The viewer will dis¬cover a dark basement with objects(dolls, boxes, cigarette wrappers,beads, nylon netting and Oklahomared dirt) visible in an illuminatedarea — objects from Peterson’sdarker side.” Both open tonight, 5-8at ARC Gallery, 6 W Hubbard.Through 29 Jan: Tue-Sat, 11-5.266-7606. FreeMembers’ Show Works in severalmedia by 17 women artists. Openstonight, 5-8 at Artemisia Gallery, 9W Hubbard. Through 28 Jan: Tue-Sat.11-5. 751-2016. Free.Photographs by several contemporaryartists. Opens tonight, 5-7 at YoungHoffman Gallery, 215 W Superior.Through 15 Feb: Tue-Sat, 10-5:30.951-8828. Free.Susanne Doremus New paintings and(separately) “Musical instruments asArt Objects ’. Opens tonight, 5-8 atZolla/Lieberman Gallery, 356 WHuron. Through 15 Feb: Tue-Sat.11-5:30 . 944-1990. Free.Artists Use Photographs Work involv¬ing photos as concept and/or docu-mentatioon by a number of artists.Through 15 Feb at Marianne DesonGallery, 340 W Huron. Tue-Fri,11-5:30. Sat, 11-5. 787-0005. Free.THEATEREndgame Samuel Beckett’s tragi-come-dy (1956) about the final hour ofdeath for four characters who be¬lieve themselves to be the sole survi¬vors of a catastrophe. Directed byMichael Maggio, with Frank Galati,Nicholas Rudall, Pauline Brailsford,and Michael Tezla. Opens Thurs Jan13; through Feb 6. Court Theatre.5535 S. Ellis Performances Wed-Satat 8 pm, Sun at 2:30 pm. PreviewsSat Jan 8 at 8 pm, Sun Jan 9 at 7:30pm, and Tues Jan 11, Wed Jan 12 at 8 pm. For ticket prices and student dis¬counts, call 753-4472.Streamers David Rabe's Vietnam trage¬dy, set in the early days of the Viet¬nam war, portrays the intertwiningof the lives of young soldiers as theystruggle with being at war — swithconflicts between military regimen¬tation, and sexual tensions and ra¬cial conflicts. Directed by Terry Kin¬ney. Columbia College Theater/MusicCenter, 600 S. Michigan Perfor¬mances Fri Jan 7 — Sun Jan 9, andWed Jan 12 — Sun Jan 16. Sundaysat 7 pm, all other performances at 8pm. Tickets $5 weeknights, $6 Friand Sat; $2 for students. (663-9«65)Radiance M.Z. Ribalow's play, whichtakes place in a neo-Western saloon,is a surrealistic journey through rela¬tions of power and violence, throwninto further confusion by the intro¬duction of an “innocent” strangerDirected by Harriet Spizziri. NextTheatre Company, 927 Noyes, Evan¬ston (Vi block west of the Noyes Elstation.) Through Feb 6. Perfor¬mances Thus, Fri, and Sat at 8 pm,Sun at 3 pm. Tickets $8 Thurs andSun, $10 Fri and Sat. with discountsavailable for students. For reserva¬tions and information call 475-1875.Free Shakespeare Company presentsThe Winter’s Tale. Fri Jan 7 and SatJan 8 at 8 pm; The Merry Wives ofWindsor; Sun Jan 9 at 7 pm; and TwoGentlemen of Vorona, Thurs Jan 13at 8 pm. Thurs and Sun tickets $6. Friand Sat $7. Piper's Alley Theatre.1608 North Wells. 337-1025.The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nick-leby The 8Vi-hour stage adaptationof Charles Dickens' novel, directed byRobert Lanchester and EdwardStern, has been extended throughFeb. 20. The Blackstone Theatre 60E. Baibo. Weeknights. presentedover two consecutive evenings, Tuesand Wed, and Thurs and Fri, at 7 pm;Sat and Sun, at 2 pm, the full 8’Vhour performance is given (yes, youdo get a dinner break). For reserva¬tions and ticket prices (!), call977-1705.Grey City Journal 1/7/83Staff: Abigail Asher, Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon, John ConIon, Steven Diamond, Pat Finegan, Keith Fleming, Steve Haydon, SarahHerndon, Michael Honigsberg, Richard Kaye, Kathy Kelly, LorraineKenny, Bruce King, Madeleine Levin, Marla Martin, Richard Martin, Mr.and Mrs. Movie, Pat O'Connell, Paul O'Donnell, Maddy Paxman, SharonPeshkin, John Probes, Abby Scher, Rachel Shtier, Cassandra Smithies,Beth Sutter, Ken Wissoker.Fiction and Poetry Coordinator: Judith Silverstein.Editorial Board: John Andrew, Lisa Frusztajer.Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Beth Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1983-3✓ » r V * A-\ V,peopleR thrash they have sucwraid on Mojo” and “Bea:tlon a new version of “T!in® Sun” (by the Animal:it to know who did the 01this E.P. to anyone wknowing where music twhere it has been old tnSince it is New Years;gk show andRgu may sayinHunipa new version of i Kiyj-l'i-1who Swallowed a Fly” — furthermuS^^Hswallpws a minister this obviously pointsn?Flippers notion that all men should die —and well 1 agree.SEXUAL HEALING •Marvin GayeYou can hear this,song on WBBM — theonly radio station worth listening to —<l hateXRT — they think they play fine rock butBruce Springstein is not fine rock — he issick he thinks he is cool but-he is ugly al¬most as bad as Boy George, a boy whothinks he is a girl, what is this world comingto. To tell you the truth, I don’t like this songbut my little bro loves it — why because it isa song for 17 years olds who worry about sex— how many different positions and combi¬nations. By the age of 20, people should set*tie down with one partner of the oppositesex and learn about them as people ratherthan objects. This world has become a landof consumers^ takers rather than givers, andit is about time that people stop this andlearn to make do with what they have.BEASTIE BOYS 1Polly Wog StewWhen I raved about this record!said that it sounded like l was a brotsband member so l decided there mi|better way to review it so let’s try a?appearance — I like them they’re]rebels who want to do nothing bettejlgrow up and get B.A.’s they don’tjfftake 5 years and enjoy the colleoSence, do things other than study lotake only three courses so that/yenough time to fuck 3 other nM(see I've learned my lesson IrMROCKIN ITFearless FourThis is the new hot song in N.Y.C. alongwith Buffalo Gals. I ask you why are all thehip N.Y.ers trying to be black, a couple ofyears ago everybody hated disco and nowthey all love it — why oh why but I’ll neverunderstand fashion. But to tell the truth I likethis song why well I’m from N.Y. and onG.C.J. so I must keep up with the trends andlike what all the other artsy fartsy people do.Unlike “The Message” this has no politicalmessage — thank god politics are dumbwow I am typing at the Reg and there is aneat new type thing lets see what it does. &:pretty neat huh but back to the sub¬ject at hand I do like this record and it is funto dance to and Ken should have included itin his New Years radio bash after SexBomb.4—FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALTo^^^fflKSTH^|i|f^2iIyyEEE3^,e ancI loveyj3Syt]S^SfK|^^SQ^^3ihat getsas men-values tomy words ev-HfflJfe t-shirt will be’.' '' BBTvalues like being a^I’m trying desperate-s'SgFff .i?ST|i!jjBllStv so I can once again be||ff^ffrSyffiof fashion, inherent in o)dmusical styles like simpleBpEradances. So if you want to be a trend¬setter like me listen to the B side if you wantto be in listen to the A side.may go rather WW]rends are iust boring:; time for my resoiu-most of all be- and no grasp of the* XT."d“'' 'E DIAMOND SPEAKSget good grades andf there and get a goodyou can’t be artsy ind iearn such a lesson,it4s N.Y.C. hard coreikodd titles as “Egg:e Go” not to men-‘'Ouse of the Ris-aretooogtof^commendted ini%han BUFFALO GALSMalcolm McclarenHe is my personal hero because he makesold things new again i.e. an exploiter, look atall the Sex Pistols' best of’s, three versionsof Rock and Roll Swindle — the movie isgreat too a Swindle in itself. After the Pistolshe went onto BowWowWow. A cute little 15year old (they’re even coming to thiscampus — how cool can we get — only twoyears too late) fronting a bunch of ugly oldguys she wears short skirts and well I enjoylooking at her. Now on to Buffalo Gals. Thisf^rjard utilizes a group of Hillbillies and ajJLriaJblacks from the south BronxIvBTm*i*1 H TM iV (ten Adina Fleeger who reside near Buffaltell you the truth (I never lie I may ramM.rant but never lie) the B side is bettej|the way they say promenade andall lost in Malcolm’s mixing. Al~tioned earlier, it is time for ccome back into style — mar1,eryone who wears a purnpasse next year and old^S. ___virgin will return — rrv'ly to lose my virghnjhopelessly oi-**-1**™ .values iSj ,——THE GREY CITY JOUR NAL—F RI DAY, JANUARY 7, 1983—5FASSBINDER'SROUGH EDGESby Shawn MageeLili Marleen, now showing at theThree Penny, is the odd woman out inthe spate of Rainer Werner Fass¬binder films recently released in theU.S. Although often lumped in withMaria Braun, Lola, and VeronikaVoss, three films which Fassbinderoriginally conceptualized as a trilogy,Lili Marleen lacks the steely, dia¬mond-edged incisiveness associatedwith these three flaying indictmentsof German society.The hub of the story is a simplesong, historically popular with Ger¬man soldiers during World War II,supposedly sung by “the girl each sol¬dier left behind;’’ in the lyrics she isLili Marleen, from whom the songtakes its title. The song is recordedand made popular by an aestheticallypleasing but mediocre cabaret singer,Willi (Hanna Schygulla). From this hubthen radiate the three main narrativespokes; a love story between Williand Robert Mendelsohn, an inexplic¬ably blond Swiss Jew (Giancarlo Gian-ini); Willi’s — or Lili’s, as people actu¬ally begin to refer to her after herrise to stardom — ascent to the dubi¬ous distinction of Hitler's favorite popsinger; and Robert’s involvement inan .organization smuggling Jews and Rainer Werner Fassbindertheir financial resources out of Ger¬many and into Switzerland. The prob¬lem is that Fassbinder can’t seem toconcentrate on any one spoke longenough to get the wheels actuallyturning.The burning, if somewhat substan¬celess passion between Willi and Rob¬ert is evident at the beginning of thefilm, and even after a thorough dous¬ing by Robert’s father — a patriar¬ chal financier who manipulates Willi’sfinancial status so that after a trip toher native Germany she is denied re¬entry into Switzerland — the relation¬ship continues to smoulder in absen¬tia. Although the style of the film isobviously that of a tongue-in-cheekmelodrama, several of the situationsand lines in this love story are simplytoo thin and hyperbolic to arouse anyreaction but an embarrassed wince. For example, after a four year sepa¬ration, Willi and Robert are able tospend a single night of bliss in Berlin,before which, however, Robert asksalmost beseechingly, “But do youknow that I’m a Jew?” Consideringthat the two were once engaged to bemarried, that Robert worked in theresistance, and that there was a gen¬eral hyper-consciousness of beingJewish prevalent at the time — not tomention a surname like Mendelsohn— the question is nothing short of ri¬diculous.In the portrayal of Robert’s in¬volvement with the organization —headed by his father — for smugglingJews out of Germany, there is none ofthe suspense or tension associatedwith other “resistance movement”films currently in release in Germany,most notably Michael Verhoeven’sDie weisse Rose (The White Rose),which centers around the resistancegroup in Munich started by the uni¬versity students Hans and SophieScholl. Rather, the action is mostlyhushed conversations between men intrenchcoats — again a spoof on melo¬drama but not very interesting forthe viewer.The most spectacular treatment is,of course, reserved for the story ofWilli’s rise and fall from Nazi grace.Yet it is less a story than a story¬board; not much more than severalglittery and gaudy productionnumbers pasted one after another.The real Willi — as opposed to Lili — ismore a passive observer than a par¬ticipant. For Fassbinder to avoid theconcept of culpability, she must not bean active participant; but the psycho¬logical energy of clawing one’s way tothe top, ala Hendrik Hoefgen in Me-phisto, is therefore totally absentfrom Lili Marleen. The viewer is de¬nied a look not only into Willi’s innerlife, but into the inner lives of theother characters as well —• each re¬mains strictly one-dimensional.This is not to say that Lili Marleen isnot worth seeing. Every Fassbinderfilm is worth seeing. Among the re¬deeming factors are Fassbinder’s owncameo appearance as the resistancefighter Gunter Weisenborn, and amore than slightly ironic sequence inwhich Willi is to have a private audi¬ence with der Fuhrer. At first she istroubled by the choice of salutation —should she say “Heil Hitler!” toHitler? And then, as her audience isabout to begin, she stands before ahuge set of SS-guarded double doors,which then mysteriously open fromwithin as Willi is silhouetted against aradiantly blinding light.As in Lola and in his final filmQuerelle (as yet unreleased in thiscountry), Fassbinder bathes Lili Mar¬leen in a wash of colored lights. In oneparticularly stunning scene, Willi andRobert are making love in Berlin, notby romantic candlelight, but by thelight of exploding Allied bombs.These are no ordinary bombs, howev¬er — bursting into lavender, orangeand crimson — showering their barebodies with the colors of passion. Thelights are extremely artificial, sug¬gesting that the reality of the war, itscauses and consequences, are some¬thing that the star-crossed lovershave, perhaps naively, chosen to ig¬nore.Since Fassbinder’s death in June,there has been a tendency on the partof some film critics to pronounceevery posthumous release a brilliantmasterpiece. The other two films, DieSehnsucht der Veronika Voss andQuerelle, are indeed masterpieces.They — and Fassbinder’s genius —should not be devalued by praising alesser work.,9Vby Sharon PeshkinJohn was gone. Without warning, without ex¬planation. He was merely absent where before hehad been present, two conditions as simple, sud¬den and complete as her solitude.Marcia boiled water for tea. ‘‘English Break¬fast”—a smug and proper ring to the leaves whicha twitch of her wrist sent flying about the room.She hadn’t the energy to prepare the teapot, thepatience to wait for it to steep. The water pouredslowly down the drain, steam billowing up in tran¬sient dewy clouds disappearing above her head.The kettle resting against her arm burned with anannoying dull pain.Small things began to fascinate her in an ab¬stract, disinterested sort of way. She could starefor hours at a button half-pulled from a cushion, as the tiles would permit, her body sprawled inresignation.Her hair began to change colors; a season-likedecay of auburn locks to ashen straw, droppingoff strand by strand to the unswept floor. Shewatched in the mirror as her head slowly bareditself, exposing her to the gusts of approachingwinter. Shivers from her scalp slithered down toher feet and fused them to the bathroom floorwith icy finality. Condemned to witness this de¬caying reflection, this reflection of decay.The banging startled her. Marcia howled tocover the intrusion with sounds larger, more pain¬ful, her own. The splintering of wood accompaniedthe lapping of warm water on her naked flesh; theglare of the lights highlighted the crimson thatfled from her wrists, tracked it as it paled to animpotent pink several inches away. Lightheaded,she heard a once-familiar voice which the gnawingof time had gnarled—‘‘fine just an hour ago” fad-suspended tenuously from its few remaining ing into the glowing mist “unstable, unhappy,threads. Sliding in and out of focus; hours,weeks spent without eating, steeping, breathing. The sun came to claim her in a rush of warmth.A blanket of heavy silence burdened her brain. At Then numbness wafted over her and she slid fromtimes it would weigh her down so srnotheringty out of their world, leaving them to rake uo thethat she was forced to slide from her chair and remnants in her wake—peculiar fragrwas pressed flat out on the floor, her head as low autumnal existence,6—FRIDAY, JANUARY, 7, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALfor festive eating and drinkingEnjoy......fresh crepes, quiches, sandwichesunusually good salads andtempting dessert crepes...Join us early for hearty breakfast specials....and Hyde Park's best ice cream sundaes,full drink menu affordably pricedOur Chili is the best...we wonChicago s Great Chili Cook-Offnl overallNovember 1, 198053^ St. &667-2000 sj=SAO WINTER DISCOUNTS—Jean Pierre Rampal -flutistMon. Jan 17-8 p.m.$9 • Tickets on sale until Jan 14Carlos Montoya -flamenco guitaristWed. Feb. 9 - 8 p.m.$5 Tickets on sole until Feb 9Andres Segovia - classical guitaristSun. March 13 - 8 p.m.$9 • Tickets on sale until March 11All performances held in Orchestra Hall - 216 S Michigan AveTickets on sale in Rm. 210, Ida Noyes HallSAP DANCE DISCOUNTS——Ballet Folclorico Nacionalde MexicoMarch 6 - 2 p.m.Si 1 25 $9 75. $6 75 Ticket orders taker until Feb 15The Paul Taylor Dance CompanyMarch 19 - 8 p.m.S11 25. $8 25. $6 00 Ticket orders taken until Feb 28All performances held in Auditorium Theatre 70 E Congress ParkwayTicket orders taken in Rm. 210, Ida Noyes HallSAP THEATRE DISCOUNTS—The Comedy of ErrorsfeaturingThe Flying Karamazov Brothersjuggling &. acrobatic antics add to the original Shakespeare comedyTuesday Feb. 15th - 7:30 p.m.at the Goodman TheatreTickets $10.50 (org. $17.00) on sale in Rm 210,Ida Noyes Hall, until Feb. 15- ~— 1 Ian SAO service) ■■■SAMUEL BECKETTGoodman Theatre Studio presentsJAN. 17-30 13 Performances Only!THE BECKETT PROJECTA collection of One-Actsby SAMUEL BECKETTEH, JOE American Stage Premiere!Directed and performed by Rick Clucheywith Helen Gary BishopA PIECE OF MONOLOGUEwritten for and performed by . rDavid Warrilow * ...co-staged by David Warrilowand Rocky GreenbergOHIO IMPROMPTUwritten for and directed - •by Alan Schneiderperformed by Rick Clucheyand David WarrilowThese theatre artists have workedwith Samuel Beckett and areinternationally know for theircollaborationsGOODMAN THEATRE Columbus at Monroe Street/ChK.aqoCALL 443-3800 Court Theatre presentsSamuel Beckett'sENDGAMEa brilliantly savage tragi-comedyabout life after the Apocalypse.Directed by Michael Maggioand featuring Frank Galatiand [Nicholas Rudall.Jan. 14-Feb. 6Low priced previewsJan. 8-Jan. 12753 4472Visa/MC/Am Ex(oii{i^4r m:\THFUniversity of Chicago 5535 S. Ellis AvenueTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FR IDAY, JANUARY 7. 1983—7r) RIGHT30CENTRAl flElDSby Keith Fleming ^EVELYN: Men can’t appreciateanything because of penis im¬patience.REED: Women sink.EVELYN: Their penis impa¬tience.REED: Women sink so comfy onthose pillows of fat they siton. ,EVELYN: Why do men everbother wearing suits? Do theyreally think they can hide theirhairy machines? their musclesflexed for fighting? Cuffs can’tcover the ape of their hands.REED: Right down there in thecenter of their sex, women aremushy. . . cooked noodles.EVELYN: The sham of their civi¬lizing suits! Men are thugs, andthere’s no hiding the bulge ofgun at their crotch.THE UNSPARING LOVER: Tellhim to carefully smear his lipswith blood. Then he’ll be a truelove of mine.UNA: To be bold enough to tre¬mble we have to tremble wehave to have a sleeping baglover.REED: Why do women act likelove affairs are hot baths? Atime to recline, to, O, close theireyes and collapse all sighs intotheir softest pampered flesh.UNA: At bottom the world is awood, ringing with the tensionof crickets calling high in thenight. Everything is so awe¬some when we’re alone andafraid enough to feel it. Buthow could we find the feet to go8—FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL5 A VE *1.79WITH THE PURCHASE of1 lb. or MORE of LOXwhile quantities last.SUNDAY, JAN. 9, 1983MORRY'S DELI5500 S. CORNELL Chicago SymphonyOrchestra *Sir Georg Solti, Music DirectorClaudio Abbado, Principal Guest ConductorHenry Mazer, Associate ConductorDiscover for yourself theglorious sounds of theChicago Symphonylive<>vBuy Your Tickets inPerson at TheReynolds Club onThursday, January 13,Ha.m.-2p.m.student Subscription Serieslb Tuesday, February 1, 1983,at 8:00 p.m. 2 B Wednesday. March 23, 1983at 8:00 p.m. 3B Saturday. April 23, 1983at 8:00 p.m.Henry Mazer, ConductorAndre laplante, PianoWilliam Ferris, OrganFerrisAcclamation for Organand OrchestraMendelssohnPiano Concerto No. 1HoneggerSymphony No. 5RavelAlborada del Gracioso Sir Georg Solti, ConductorKiri Te Kanawa,SopranoDuparcL’invitation au voyageLe manoir de RosamondeAu pays ou se fait la guerrePhydileMahlerSymphony No. 4 Raymond .eppard, Conduct orKrystian Zimerman, PianoHandelConcerto a due coriLisztPiano Concerto No. 2DvorakSymphonic VariationsMail Order Form SSBC!reb 1Series Number ofsubscriptions(Limit 2 perstudent ID) Price Total LocationGallery. Balcony, etc.1st Choice 2nd ChoiceB Phone orderswill not beaccepted.Series Prices$12 00-Gallery$16.00—Main Floor igtfi-rfrFtoofRows A to D $36 00— Lower Balcony$24 00—Upper Balcony $50—BoxesNameAddress Copy of 1982-83 Student IDor other proof of registrationmust accompany this order blank.You may leave tbe amount of the checkblank with a maximum amount in¬dicated (Sample Not valid tor over ”).This will expedite the filling of yourorder it your first choice is not availableCity, State, Zip.Residence Phone SchoolMake checks payable to:Student Subscription Series Student Subscriptions SeriesJunior Governing BoardOrchestra Hall220 South Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60604The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983—17The Episcopal Churchwelcomes you.Regardless of race, creed,color or the numberof times you’ve been bom.Whether you've been born once or born again, the Episcopal Church invites you to comeand join us in the fellow ship and worship of Jesus Christ.BRENTThe Episcopal Church at the University of Chicago■ a / ms cp/ocuHouse 5540 South Woodlawn Avenue,HOLY COMMUNION every SUNDAY at 5:30 PM at Brent House 8every THURSDAY at NOON in BOND CHAPELUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOGRADUATE LIBRARY SCHOOLoffersM.A., Ph.d. and Certificate of Advanced Study inlibrary and information science. Financial aid andassistantships are available. For a thorough anddistinctive preparation for the library and informa¬tion professions.applyGraduate Library School, University of Chicago,Room S-l 100 E. 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637.(312) 962-8272.J HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Wood lawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson. Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve MetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 528-2858Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship ■ Sunday 3 pmPut the pastin yourfuture!Thoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary li\ing space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural setting foraffordable elegance witla dramatic views.— Ail new kitchens and appliances — Community room— Wall-to-wall carpeting - Resident manager— Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry' facilities onparking each fl(X)rStudios, One, Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One bedroom from S4#o — Two Bedroom from S660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master 'IT7 antenna.Call for information and appointment -643-1406(wise1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex. Inc.New and Rebuilt REPAIRTypewriters, SPECIALISTSCalculators, on IBM, SCM.Dictators, Adders Olympia, etc.CasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanon FREE repairestimatesSharp RENTALSavailable withf, —ir i n m — , , U.ofC.I.D.The University of Chicago BookstoreTypewriter & Calculator Department970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor753-330318—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983SportsB-Ballers lose in ‘poorest performance of the year’By Frank LubyA six-minute scoring spree midwaythrough the second half, keyed by eightpoints from junior center Tom Nickodem,boosted Marion College to a 67-62 victoryover the Maroons Tuesday evening at theHenry Crown Field House.The Maroons had built a nine-point half¬time lead, and an Eric Kuby basket with11:48 remaining in the game gave Chicago a42-36 advantage. Marion then proceeded topump in 10 unanswered points in the midstof a 16-2 scoring splurge, which left Marionwith a 52-44 lead with 5:26 remaining in thegame. In addition to Nickodem’s eight pointcontribution, guard Doug Bartlett chippedin four points.Marion maintained the lead for the re¬mainder of the game, though the Maroonsmade strong attempts to climb back, cuttingthe margin to two, 54-52, with 3:08 remain¬ing. Center Keith Liebert’s six points pro¬vided the big thrust in that surge.Marion’s lead dwindled to two once againafter a Liebert basket with 1:37 left, makingthe score 58-56. But Marion put in eight freethrows in the final minute and a half to staveoff any further Maroon comebacks.Chicago broke open an even contest withnine unanswered points in the final threeminutes of the first half to take a 31-22 half¬time lead. Rob Omiecinski put in two bas¬kets, Liebert added three points, and WadeLewis also scored in that drive.Chicago managed to keep that lead earlyin the second half on the strength of sevenearly points by sophomore forward NickMeriggioli, before Marion erupted and tookcontrol of the contest as the Maroons fellapart.Assistant coach Jim Hargesheimer re¬ferred to the game as the Maroons’ “poorestperformance of the year.’’The game began very evenly, as the leadchanged hands six times in the openingseven minutes. A Mike Murden basket gavethe Maroons the lead, 11-10, with 12:43 left,and they did not relinquish the lead againuntil midway through the second half. Lie¬bert and Meriggioli both had nine first halfpoints for Chicago. Liebert led all scorers with 21 points, to gowith 17 rebounds. Meriggioli had 18 on thenight, while Nickodem had 15 points and 10rebounds for Marion.In games before Christmas, the Maroonsdefeated George Williams, 67-59, on thestrength of 21 points by Lewis and 17 by Lie¬ bert. Lewis had 17 of his points in the secondhalf, accounting for half of Chicago’s pointproduction in that final 20 minutes.Center Gary Levzow, a 6-5 sophomore,scored a game high 24 points to lead the Be¬loit Buccaneers over the Maroons, 61-59, be¬fore a crowd of 275 at the Henry Crown Field House. And a 22 point performance byMeriggioli paced Chicago to a 76-59 triumphover Rosary College.The Maroons’ next game is tomorrowagainst Lawrence in Appleton, Wisconsin. Itwill be the Maroons’ second confeence gameof the year.Women b-ballers off to impressive startBV Cliff Grflrnmioh 77 tn 4Q and niltrPhruinHoH fhom 47 fr\ • tnom’c norfnrmQnr'Q ocroinct fHo fu/A tailorBy Cliff GrammichAfter its first five games, the U of Cwomen’s basketball team is off to whatcoach Diann Nestel termed its best start inher three years here, compiling a 3-2 re¬cord.The team opened the season last Thanks¬giving weekend at the Harvard Tourna¬ment. In the opening game, Chicago lost56-46 to Harvard. Gretchen Gates led theteam’s scoring with 16 points, and HelenStraus added 11. Chicago had a field goalpercentage of 39 compared to Harvard’s 32percent but Harvard outshot the Maroons, 77 to 49, and outreoounded them 47 to 25.In its second game of the tournament, Chi¬cago dropped a 65-57 decision to Bucknell.Three Maroons scored in the double figures,as Wendy Pietrzak got 18, Gretchen Gatesadded 15, and Karen Walsh added 14. Pietr¬zak also contributed five assists to Chica¬go’s effort, while Gates pulled down 17 re¬bounds. Chicago had a higher field goalpercentage than its opponent, but onceagain, Chicago did not have as many at¬tempts as Bucknell outshot Chicago 78-56and outrebounded Chicago 43-39. Despite thetwo losses, Nestel was impressed with theGrapplers give Irish a real fightBy Nick VarsamIf the Fighting Irish stormed the HenryCrown Fieldhouse Wednesday night think¬ing they would have an easy time of wres¬tling the Chicago Maroons, they soon foundthey were wrong. The Maroons wrestlingsquad gave them a good battle, losing 35-12.But the score does not indicate the intensitythat was present more often than not.The Maroons dropped eight out of 10matches, but three of those were lost in rid¬ing time or by one or two points. Freshman134-pounder Jeff Farwell lost 8-7, after com¬ing back with three takedowns, only to losebecause of riding time. Junior George Dup-per lost 7-5 in the 150-lb. class matchupwhich was highlighted by Dupper’s effort toovercome an injury suffered during thematch. Mac Gillespie lost a disappointingmatch in the heavyweight division, 5-4.Karl Lietzan and Gene Shin, though,thought that a win would be better late thannever. Both scored convincing wins againsttheir opponents. Sophomore Lietzan, 167lbs., won when the Notre Dame man bowedIM Basketball StandingsUndergraduate RedFisbein 4 0Chamberlin 3 0FallersA 1 1Lower Rickert 1 2Alpha Delta Phi 1 2Strategic Air Command 0 3Shorey 0 4Undergraduate WhiteGreenwood 4 0Compton 2 1Thompson 2 2Bishop 1 2Miehelson 1 2Cutting Edge 1 2Fallers B 0 2Undergraduate BlueTufts 4 0Hale 3 1Dewey 2 2Hitchcock B 2 2Blackstone 1 3Phi Delta Theta 0 4Undergraduate MaroonSalisbury/Vincent 3 0Hitchcock A 2 0Upper Ricket 2 1Breckinridge 1 3Dudley 1 3Upper Flint B 1 3 I Scoreboard Graduate RedNo BSSandy’s Slammers 47 00Hi Tops 3 1Spike’s Gang 3 1Undergraduate Green International House 2 1FIG I 4 0 Instigators 1 1Dodd/Mead 3 1 Barney's Meat Market 1 2Henderson 3 1 Law School I 0 1Bradbury 1 3 Bovver Bovs 0 3FIGI Goon Squad 1 3 Coulter House 0 3Upper Flint 0 4 Broadview 0 4Undergraduate Independent Graduate WTiiteGreen Eggs & Ham 4 0 Too Swift 4 0R-\’obs 4 0 Cliff's Divers 3 0N.U.T.S. 3 1 NELC 3 1Jenny's Jets 3 1 Debonairs 2 1Pulse 2 2 South Side Jazz 2 2Commuters 0 4 The Curia 2 2The Rookies 0 4 Res Ipsa Loquitor 1 15 Hot Dogs. 1 Polish 0 4 Malice 2 1 3Women’s Residence Feel Lucky Punks? 1 3UTufts 3 0 Confederacy of Dexters o 3Three's A Crowd 2 0 Scutt Boys 0 3Thompson 2 0 Open Rec RedUpper Wallace 2 1 Hitchcock 2 0Snell 1 1 No BS 2 0Hale 1 1 R-Nobs 1 0Breckinridge 1 2 Hi Tops 1 0Lower Wallace 0 1 McCormick 0 2Dudley 0 2 CCCP 0 2Compton 0 2 Pulse i) 2Shorey 0 2 Open Rec WhiteMixed Women Billings Hospital 2 0Fun Girls 1 0 N U.T.S.O. 1 0SPAM 1 0 GSB 1 0Full Court Press 1 0 Chamberlin 1 1Med flies 1 1 Lexelon 0 0To be Announced 0 0 Microbursts 0 2Efficient Mock 0 3 Hospitals & Clinics 0 2 out with a back injury while being trounced13-5 in the third period. Freshman Shin gotcredit for the only Maroon pin of the eve¬ning, which he handily earned midwaythrough the first period.Coach Leo Kocher liked the effort hiswrestlers put out and had respect for theNotre Dame team. “Notre Dame is a verytalented team. They physically dominatedus on the mat, but we were very respectableon our feet,” Kocher added. Take away justa few of the Notre Dame moves, and theMaroons would have been very close.Kocher is looking forward to the rest ofthe season. “The team is much stronger thisyear than ever. We have no real weak spotsin our lineup, and we’ve jumped off to a good3-1 dual meet record thus far," he said. TheMaroons also had a fine showing in the CoeCollege tournament back in December, tak¬ing third place just behind Loras and Cen¬tral Iowa and ahead of perennial MidwestConference power Coe.Next weekend the Maroons travel to Wis¬consin for the Carroll College tournament.Led by seniors Mark Farwell. a two-timecaptain, mac Gillespie, high point scorer thelast two years, and Joe Pierri, a tough sec¬ond year man, the wrestlers await the Con¬ference tourney at Coe on Feb. 18-19. “TheNotre Dame meet was a good learning expe¬rience,” Kocher said, “and it gave our teama good sense of direction." Which is west toCoe in February. team’s performance against the two tallerDivision I squads.The Maroons gained their first victory ofthe season on Nov. 30 with a 81-71 victoryover Wheaton College. Gates had anothergood game, scoring 33 points. Pietrzakscored 14, while Straus contributed 11 andWalsh added 10. Gates pulled down 13 re¬bounds, while Dana Howd made six assistsand Pietrzak added five. Chicago made 38 of84 field goal attempts compared to Whea¬ton’s 30 of 62. However, Wheaton made 11 of18 free throw attempts compared to five of12 for the Maroons. Wheaton also outre-bounded Chicago 36 to 29.The Maroons closed out 1982 with a 71-61victory over Concordia. Nestel praised thevictory as a solid team effort. Pietrzak ledall scorers with 23 points while Walsh added10. Pietrzak pulled down 10 rebounds whileHowd added seven assists, nestel praisedthe defensive play of Beverly Davis. Chica¬go hit on 51 percent of its field goal attempts,compared to Concordia’s 36 percent successrate.The Maroons pushed their record over.500 with a forfeit victory last Tuesdayagainst Judson College. The forfeit left Chi¬cago’s record at 3-2, with games Friday atCoe and Saturday at Cornell. Chicago thenplays two more games on the road nextweekend before returning home on Jan. 21.Sports CalendarMen's Indoor TrackJan. 8 — Invitational Practice Relays, 1p.m.. Field HouseWomen's BasketballJan. 7 — at Coe College. 7:30 p.m.Jan. 8 — at Cornell College. 2 p.m.WrestlingJan. 8 — at Carthage College TournamentSwimmingJan. 7 — Men’s and Women's teams atGeorge Williams College, 6 p.m.Men's BasketballJan. 8 — at Lawrence University. 5 p.mTHE 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 PARKINGMRS. HARRIS 752-3800OPENAUDITIONSIfor Gilbert and Sullivan’s H.M.S. PINAFOREPlease prepare a song from G & S, if possible.Presented by the Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Co. Directed by David Currie and Libby Morse. This Sat. and Sun.2 to 5 p.m. Mandel HallMonday, January 107:30 to 10 p.m. Mandel HallThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983—19PROFESSIONAL OPTIONAdmissions MeetingBUSINESS LAWFor all students in the College interested in the Graduate Schoolof Business or the Law School, or admission to the JointProgram leading to degrees in both Schools.Wednesday, January 124:00 P.M.Harper 284 I enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372 marian realtyinc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400Free Demonstration ofKI-AIKIDOA Japanese Martial Art StressingMind Body Co-ordinationTUESDAY, JANUARY 11,6:30 PMFIELD HOUSE t INTRAMURAL SPORTS AWINTER QUARTER1983Racquetball-s (M,W)Table Tennis-d (M,W)Billiards (8-bail) (M,W)Badminton-D (C)Basketball Free Throw (M,W,C)Badminton-d M)Badminton-d (W)Indoor Track (M,W,C)Table Tennis-d (C)Photo Contest (M,W,C)Socim (M,W)CLIP AND SAVE Jan.12Jan. 12Jan. 19 |Jan. 26 |. Feb. 2. Feb. 9Feb. 16 ;Feb. 16Feb. 23Feb. 23. Mar. 2 tTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE UNIVERSITY HOUSE SYSTEMApplications for the positions of Resident Head and Assistant Resident Head on the staff ofthe University House System for the 1983-84 academic year are now being invited fromfaculty, administrative staff, and advanced graduate students working toward the Ph.D. or aprofessional degree.Candidates for Resident Head should be at least 25 years of age. Applications arewelcomed from both married couples and single people. Assistant Resident Head positionsare open to graduate and undergraduate students who are single and at least 20 years ofage.Members of the Housing Staff live in the University Houses. They provide informalguidance to residents and work with students to promote a variety of cultural, social, andathletic programs to enhance the Houses as communities supportive of the educationalprocess.Persons interested in applying for staff positions may obtain further information from theDirector of Student Housing, Administration 232. The selection process will include aseries of personal interviews in the Winter and Spring Quarters. Applications must be sub¬mitted before the deadline of March 1. Early applications are encouraged.20—'The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983 rXylyW NewsRhodesContinued from page oneAfter her two years there, she plans topursue a PhD in her field, emphasizingwomen’s roles and thought in medievaltimes. Her research will center around reli¬ gious institutions, where women’s roles“separated from the traditional notion ofgetting married and having children.”A key reason for her selection? “My studyis a passion,” she says. “I guess they want¬ed to see that — does it really make any dif¬ference to me, and would it make any toothers who I came into contact with.” Clear¬ly, at least to the folks at Oxford, it does.The rocky road to the RhodesBy Tom EldenWhen U of C student Patricia Connellywon a Rhodes scholarship, she won the mostcompetitive and most prestigious academicaward in the nation. Thirty-two college se¬niors are chosen for the award which con¬sists of a full two-year scholarship to OxfordUniversity.The scholarship was established to awardthose who would help the world in some sig¬nificant way. In order to determine such po¬tential ability, the selection committee ex¬amines scholastic achievement andintellectual ability in addition to past ac-complishmets and future plans. Candidatesare also chosen according to their area of in¬terests in the hope of providing world lead¬ers in different fields. As an added result,Rhodes scholars are known for being well-rounded, excelling in both athletics and aca¬demics.Candidates must go through an extensiveapplication process and must be acceptedfirst by a regional committee and then bythe National Committee in order to win theaward. Candidates must submit transcriptsessays, ten letters of recommendation, andgo in for interviews.Patricia Connelly was among 32 studentsfrom the United States selected by theRhodes Scholarship Trust on Dec. 17. An an¬nual stipend of about $7000 accompanies thescholarship.The scholarship program began in 1902through a bequest from Cecil Rhodes, aBritish colonist in South Africa who made his fortune in diamonds. Applicants must bebetween 19 and 25 years old and have re¬ceived a bachelor’s degree before they go toOxford.Well-known Rhodes scholars include ce¬lebrity Kris Kristofferson, Pat Hayden,former quarterback for the Los AngelesRams, and Bill Bradley, a basketball starfor Princeton University and for the NewYork Knicks, and now a US Senator fromNew Jersey.Grad Intern JobsThe Graduate Intern Program has devel¬oped some part-time positions for registeredgraduate students. These jobs are listed atthe Office of Career Counseling, ReynoldsClub 200. Students will find positions with abank, a labor union, a major accountingfirm, and several non-profit organizations.The various job descriptions include or¬ganizing a fund-raising campaign, data-gathering for a management consultant, as¬sisting in a city-wide literary artscelebration, and several research assign¬ments.Anna Siegler, coordinator of the program,encourages students to review the job de¬scriptions, fill out an application and ar¬range to see her for referral to an employer.Siegler urges all interested registered stu¬dents to check the listings frequently. Sheplans to develop and post new jobs at regu¬lar intervals.'tyou are dordiatty 'Invited'Vi&it "Therz n. II mmno ill/l BPdpiftfim MF2 Htnlroonis from S-/64 month5200 BLACKSTONE2 Bedrooms from $463 monthI block west of Harper SquareMon.-Fri. 9 to 6. Sat.-Sun. 12 to 5Mi-8666I Bedroom with den also availableASK ABOUT RISC'NO SECURITY DEPOSITMemberAmerican Optometric AssociationDR. M.R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUR ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENT -\ We Buy and SellUsed Records1701 E. 55th684-3375262-1593.loinIIS.AmericanRed CrossLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100 Together,we canchange things.A Public Swvice ol This Newspaper PVI4 The Advertising Council [£.1 Hutch to open late nightbut menu,services reducedContinued from page oneOne addition to the new schedule at Hutchwill be late hours, from 9 p.m. to midnight,beginning Jan. 17. • There has been a sen¬timent that there is a need for a late nightservice outside of the library," Turkingtonsaid. Hutch will reopen with a “very limit¬ed” menu of beverages, pastries, yogurt,and various other items.Turkington added that while modifyingthe food services in Reynolds Club, the Uni¬versity has also reopened a food service at the Frog and Peach in Ida Noyes hall. Thefacility will be open for both lunch and din¬ner, from 11a.m. to 8p.m. Monday throughFriday, under the new management of HSMServices, which also manages the Pub.Turkington said that the success of thereorganization in lowering the food ser¬vices’ deficits will depend upon the publicresponse to the modified program. "If pa¬tronage drops," he said, “there will be a li¬mited impact.BEER SPECIALof theWEEK Light oiDark BECK’S$0296 packPRE-INVENTORY SALE!CHRISTIAN BROS.BRANDY$1 j 98Reg.SI 4.29 1.75 hr. Reg.SI 1.19SMIRNOFFVODKA 80°$g69 1.75 ltr.PIPER HEIDSIECKCHAMPAGNE(Extra dry / Non-vint.)$1 A49750 ML GANCIAASTI SPUMANTEReg.SI 4.98 $549Reg. S8.79 r50 MLFrom FranceMOUTON CADET$089 From PortugalMATEUSROSE OR BIANCOReg. S4.98 Red orWhite750 ML Reg. S7.29 $49 81.5 ltr.Sale ItemsThroughJan.11 LINCOLN LIQUORSStore HoursMon-Fri 7 am - MidSet 7 am - MidSun 12 noon - Mid 1516 E. 53rd St.Phone 752-4238 We reservethe rightto correctprinting errors.Sale itemsnot iced.The Chicago Maroon—Friday. January 7, 1983—21Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon isS2 for the first line and S) for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adiustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publica¬tion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACESTUDENT DISCOUNT on Quarterly rental ofStudio Apt. 52nd + Woodlawn. $20Q-$225/mo.incl. all but elect. Redecorated. 684-5030 Bef.8.30am or 493-2329 Late Eves. PEOPLE WANTEDHealthy Men Needed for Semen Donors for Ar¬tificial Insemination Program. Rh NegativeBlood Type Especially Needed. Reimburse¬ment is S40.00 Reply in Confidence to 924-6)24.Recording for the Blind needs volunteerreaders and monitors in all subjects. For appt.call Brenda or Ria. 288-7077 M-F 10-5. On cam¬pus studio in Hinds.To summarize evaluations, use superwylbur.HSAC meeting 1/7,4:30 in GB428.Male Desk attendant and office helper. Even¬ings 3 times a week. Lenhoff School of Musicand Dance. 288-3500.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.Weddings and Portraits photographed. CallLeslie at 536-1626or 955-2775.JAMES BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522. For Professionally Typed Work At Unprofes¬sional Rates Call: B. Watson At 955-0875.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962-6263.Psychologist forming therapy group in HydePark to change women's struggles with un¬controlled eating. Rosaling Charney, Ph.D 538-7022.SCENESWriters workshop PLaza 2-8377.Parlez-vous francaise? Do you like meetingnew people from across campus? Come to themeeting of Les Beaux Parleurs Thurs Jan. 13at Ida Noyes, third floor. All levels of Frenchspeakers welcome. For details, 643-5449.HATHA YOGA CLASS 6 week session: S50.Sundays 5-7 p.m. starting Jan. 9. Newcomerswelcome. For info call Crossroads 684-6060.MARRS party, Sunday at 4:00pm. Will discussFeast of Maidens. Bring food! LOSTAND FOUNDGold Chain wifh Dove Charm/Lost in IdaNoyes Call Jeff At 667-4251/947-5446REWARD/REWARD!RIDESCAR POOL: Trade rides Rogers Park to U. ofC. and back. Call 761-3693.ACHTUNG! GERMAN!TAKE APRIL WILSON'S GERMAN COURSETHIS WINTER -t- HIGH PASS THE SPRINGLANGUAGE EXAM! Classes will meet MWFstarting Jan. 10. For more into + register, callApril Wilson: 667-3038.S EX UAL HARASSMENT?Have you or do you know anyone who's beensexually harassed at the U of C? The Grey CityJournal would like to talk with you. All callsconfidential. 9:30am - 5pm 753-3265.KUNDALINI YOGAJAN RENT FREE!! 1 BR in 3 BR apt. avail,immed. M or F. Non smoker pref. Call 324-4186eves.Lg. Fur Studio pri ba util nonsmo $260. 363-3458.Large furnished & equipped studio 56th &Everett for sublet winter quarter, $270/mo.962-6486a.m„ 288-6561 p.m.Furnished Room w/kitchen priv. non smokeravl. now ph. 955-7083.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.Condo, 56th -+• Kimbark, 2 Bdrm. Eat-in-kitchen -+- pantry. Full Dr. Safe, Sunny Cour¬tyard Building Pleasant View. $69,000. Call 876-3512.Video Disc Player + movies. New in Sept. 82:player was $300, discs $20-35. Offer. 938 1000 x4872 day, 241-5039. Exp. Typist Turabian Phd Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates,684-6882.Chicago Counseling 8, Psychotherapy Center.Client-centered psychotheraphy. 5711 S.Woodlawn, 6354 N. Broadway, and 111 N.Wabash, Chicago. A Registered PsychologicalAgency. (312)684-1800.RESUMES TYPESET at reasonable rates byBIGGS PRESS of Hyde Park. Also: typeset¬ting and design of flyers, brochures, ads, let¬terhead, newsletters, programs, chapbooks,etc. 268-0289. Box 7745, Chicago 60680. Freebrochure.DO YOU NEED A GOOD TYPIST? Call Paula649-0429.CATERING. Custom menus for all occasions.Chinese, Thai, Indian, Middle East, French,many othr specialties. Wendy Gerick. 538-1324.mm mm■■■ ?;? - •.0‘•:••• •: • .-. . • The Chicago Maroon•Copy editors•Proofreaders•Photographers•News writers•Feature writers•Sports writers•LayoutWe invite all interested students tojoin our staff. We are looking fordependable, enthusiastic persons tohelp in various aspects of thenewspaper.We invite you to our staff meetingthis Sunday, Jan. 9 at 8 p.m. in theMaroon Office, Ida Noyes Hall, rm. 303.A meeting for students interested inwriting features will be held in the of¬fice 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 11. HSAC Meeting, new members welcome. 1/7,4:30 in GB428. Must attend. Call BZ 753-2240(1316).SERVICESColon Therapist gives colonics 651-6553.Excellent and neat typing in my home. Pro¬ofread. Reasonable rates. Vicky 624-2197.Typing done for reports, thesis, termpaperscall Typing Affair for efficient service lowprices Gladys Coleman 225-1800 students only.Discount Moving and Hauling Low Prices andFree Estimates Seven Days a Week Day andEvening References Available Call Tom 8-10a.m. or After 6 p.m. 375-6247.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates684-6882.CHILDCARE M-F. Certified Teacher-Ele. -t-Kind. Call 536-7064.TUTORING: GREEK & LATIN - ANC.MED.7962-8334/947-9452 translation alsoavailable.ENGINEERING SKILLS AVAILABLE -Vacuum/plasma/semiconductor mfg; U of Cgrad student. CALL 493-2894 preferably Tu/Thevenings. Keep Up. Tune in, stretch out, shape up. Relaxand feel good. Beginners 5pm Tues. In¬termediate 5pm Thurs. Ida Noyes "Library''338-6066.COMEDY OF ERRORSEnjoy Shakespeare at the Goodman Feb. 15th$10. 50 Tickets on sale until Jan. 28 in RM 210Ida Noyes.FIRST BRUNCHOFWINTERQUARTERSUNDAYS - BEGINNING JANUARY 9 11:00AM - 1:00 P.M. Bagel & Lox Brunch. Alsoorange juice, coffee, tea, tomatoes and onions.Unbeatable prices. Cost: $1.75 per sandwich.Every Sunday during Winter Quarter.ISRAELI FOLKDANCINGMONDAYS 8:00 P.M. BLUE GARGOYLE 5565S. University, 2nd floor. Donations: $1.00.Teacher: Dalia Paludis. Sponsored by HillelFoundation.DELTA SIGMASOCIETYMembers take note of the new meeting time:Mondays at 9:30pm in Ida Noyes. Nextmeeting is January 10.CalendarFridaySAO: Eclectic Ed registration continues 10 a m.-5p.m. Morton-Murphy Award nomination formsavailable INH 210.International House: Classical Indian dance Recitalby Bharat Sharma 8 p.m. Assembly Hall Free.Rockefeller Chapel: Paul Manz Vesper Servicesponsored by Lutheran School of Theology 8p.m.DOC: Star Trek II 7, 9, & 11 p.m. Cobb $2.U.C. Asian Christian Fellowship: Weekly meetings7:30 p.m. Augustana Lutheran Church, 55th &Woodlawn. Call 288-5274 for info.CWAC: Chinese Art Exhibit, thru Feb. 20.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30p.m. INHGeophysics Dept.: Colloquium: Duance E. Stevens“Inertial Instability Near the Equator” 1:30 p.m.Hinds AuditoriumHillel: Reform Progressive Sabbath Services 5 p.m.;Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner 6 p.m. $3; Reform-Pro¬gressive Pot Luck Dinner 6 p.m.SaturdayMen’s Indoor Track: Invitational Practice Relays 1p.m. HCFHDOC: DIVA 7 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb $2LSF: The Big Sleep 7 & 9:30 p.m. Law School Audito¬rium $2Court Theatre: Preview Endgame by Samuel Beck¬ett 8 p.m. New Theatre. Call 753-4472 for tickets.Model U.N.: Organizational Meeting 10:30 a.m. INHLibrary.Model OPEC: Help organize your own cabal 10:30p.m. INHCircle K: Dance, details T.B.A. INH Cloister ClubCrossroads: Buffet-style Dinner 6 p.m. $3. Film"African Religions-Zulu Zion” 7:30 p.m. Free.Hillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:15 a.m.;Women’s Tefilah Services 9:15 a.m.; Upstairs Min-yan 9:30 a.m.SundayRenaissance Society: Opening and artists reception.Jeff Wall: selected works 5-7 p.m. Exhibit runs thruFeb. 20th Bergman Gallery Tu.-Th. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.Sun. 12 p.m.-4 p.m. Free Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon & Tower Tour 12:15p.m.Hillel: Bagel & Lox Brunch: 11 a.m.-l p.m. $1.75Oriental Institute Films: Iran: Landmark in the Des¬ert 2 p.m. Breasted Hall FreeDOC: Beau Pere 8 p.m. Cobb $2LSF: An American In Paris 8:30 p.m. Law SchoolAud. $2Court Theatre: Preview Endgame 8 p.m. NewTheatre Call 753-4462 for infoCrossroads: Yoga 5-7 p.m.Rockefeller: Chancel Choir Rehearsal 8:30; Ecum-menical Service of Holy Communion 9 a.m.; Reli¬gious Instruction for Children 10 a.m.; UniversityReligious Service, Bernard O. Brown, 11 a.m.; Caril¬lon Recital and Tower Tour 12:15 p.m.Hillel:Brent House: Episcopal Eucharist and Supper, 5:30p.m.Museum of Science and Industry: Chicago ChamberOrchestra Mozart Symphony #31; Bach Branden¬burg Concerto #5; Wagner, Siegfried Idyll. Main Au¬ditorium. FreeMusic Dept.: Monty Adams, flute; Thomas Zeman,piano. Music of PROKOFIEV, Bach, Kriesler,Saint-Saens. 4 p.m. Goodspeed Recital Hall. Free.Elsa Charlston, soprano, Mandel Hail 8 p.m. withpiano, flute, and electronic accompaniment. Haydn,Shapey, Eaton, Brahms, and Poulenc. FreeMondaySAO: Eclectic Ed registration continues 10 a.m.-5p.m. Mortom Murphy Award forms available INH210U.S. Skii Team: Meeting 7 p.m. INHDOC: Badlands 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Crossroads: English Classes: Beg. 10 a.m.; Int. 10:45a.m.; Beginning Spanish 7 p.m.; Beginning Dutch7:30 p.m.Chemistry Dept.: Lecture: R. Stephan Berry “A 7-Particle Liquid? What’s Melting Anyway? 4 p.m.Kent 107U.C. Judo Club: Practice 6 p.m. Barlett GymHillel: Israeli Folk Dancing, Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S.University, 2nd Floor. $122—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983HAN D-CRAFTED WOOLSweaters, scarves and tapestries! All 100%wool (Llama and Alpaca) hand crafted fromSouth America. Call David at 947 8488 for appointment.PERSONALSLaddie, de future is neither mine nor yours:Conquers are disillusioned in vainity, soldiersare employed to die and some U of C Soc.course is reading Rubyfruit Jungle So you seethe doughnuts are never without holes.A scholar AND a dancer-Gratuliere, Pat!Alles gute im Neuen Jahr! HISTORY MAJORSStudent-Faculty Social Hour Thurs. Jan. 134:30-6:30 P.M. Ida Noyes Library. ProspectiveConcentrators Are Welcomed.ORIENTALCARPETSTHIS MONTH-Antique, prime condition, fullpile Caucasian and Turkoman carpets; alsounique tribal-folk art pieces. Call 288-0524Thursday through Sunday and late nights.ASTRONOMY CLUBMEETING Tues. Jan. 11 7:30pm RyersonRooftop. Everyone welcome. Raindate Jan. 13,18. or 20.COMPUTATION CENTERCLASS SCHEDULEA free copy of the Computation Center'sWinter Quarter seminar and course schedulemay be picked-up at the USITE Business Of¬fice (10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. daily), from theUSITE terminal attendant, from the recep¬tionist at the Staff Office Building (5737 S.University Ave.) or from the Main BusinessOffice (1313 E. 60th Ave. - The MerriamBuilding). The seminars are free of charge andinclude introductions to computer conceptsand terminology, SUPERWYLBUR, the DEC.-20, EDIT, text preparation on the Amdhal,SCSS, SPSSX, 1022, DEMAND-92, theCALCOMP plotter, SUPERWYLBURMACROS. SED, MUSE and NCPCALC. Twocourses are offered:Introduction to SAS (cost is $30.00 for six ses¬sions), and Introduction of BASIC + 2 pro¬gramming on the DEC-20 (cost is $40.00 foreight sessions). Advanced registration andpayment is required for the course, noregistration is required for the seminars. Allcourses and seminars will be held in Harper406, except for the text preparation of the Am¬dahl seminars, which are held in classic 10.For further information on class content con¬tact the Center's Educational Coordinator,Don Crabb. at 962-7173.HELP WANTEDPAYROLL CLERK, permanent 20 hr/wk, oc¬casional full time, dependable, terminal use a-t-, for Union position with standard Universitybenefits. Call 962-7163 for appointment.PRESSES up to 25X38...Fast print to 22x28The Southside s largest andmost complete print shopOffset & LetterpressLAYOUT & ARTPHOTO COMPOSITIONOver 100 tYpestyles forbrochures, books, ad books- all your printing needsCouplet* Bindery includesgang stitching, perfectbinding, plastic binding, diecutting, embossing, hotstamping, eyeletting, tinningPRINTHU 7-31425832 So. Green UNIONLABELy AUDITIONSGilbert + Sullivan Opera Co. Tryouts for HMSPinafore. Jan. 8. 9. 2-5 p.m. Jan. 10, 7:30-l0pmMandel Hall. ALL welcome for Principals,Chorus, Orchestra, Tech.FREE TICKETSHelp look, drive sell t-shirts, etc. and receivefree tickets to the 23rd Annual University ofChicago FOLK FESTIVAL. Call 753-3567.WRITERSFeatures writers are needed! The firstmeeting for alt present and prospectivefeatures writers will be Tuesday evening at7:30 p.m. in the Maroon office. If you can'tmake it, call Margo at 753-3263 and leave yourname and telephone number. All welcome!HARLEY SNYDER CO.(219-926-7535)DUNE ACRES ON LAKE MICHIGAN-Exclusive subdivision-lndiana Dunes-45minutes from Chicago-Guarded Entrance:Magnificent view of Chicago from this lovely 2story featuring 5 bedrooms, family room, 3fireplaces - many extras. $350,000.00 EVEN-INGS CALL DONNA STEVENS 926-3901.Charming 5 bedroom ranch, 3 baths, 2 familyrooms, 2 fireplaces, formal dining, many ex¬tras. $175,000.00 EVENINGS CALL ELAINEFARABEE 926-3044.C05234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-02QOEXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES • MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONINGENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TOPARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241-622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLE Beautiful wooded in Chesterton - immediatepossession on this 5 bedroom Colonial, formaldining, fireplace, 2 family rooms. $127,500.00EVENINGSCALL LINDA RHED926-6778.STUDENT GOVERNMENTFINANCE COMMITTEEWill meet Monday nights at 6pm in the S.G. of¬fice, 3rd floor Ida. Please have your budgets mas early as possible and send a representativeof your organization to the meeting on nextMonday night.THE BUSINESSOF MEDICINEWhat will be you be doing after your training?Come Wednesday, January 12th, to considerOPTIONS UPON COMPLETION OFMEDICAL TRAINING, an intoral discussionat 6:30 p.m., Billings Auditorium - P117. Spon¬sored by the Medical Alumni Association, 947-5443DINNER AND FILMSaturday, Jan. 8. Crossroads Students Center5621 S. Blackstone. 684-6060. Home-cookedBuffet-style meal. Followed by film: "AfricanReligions-Zulu Zion." Dinner-6:00 pm $3.00Film-7:30 pm Free. Visitors for film onlywelcome.CONVERSATIONALLANGUAGECLASSESBeginning levels in ARABIC, CHINESE, DUT¬CH, FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH. AtCrossroads Student Center-5621 S. Blackstone.684-6060. Reg. fee: $12 Students $15 Non¬students. Call for details.GYMNASTIC CLASSESADULT BEGINNERS CLASS meets Mon ?Wed. Bartlett Gym, 5:15 PM Starts 1%1%83.$20%Otr. For info call 955-8627or 3-0354 (I BX).NEED A TYPIST?Excellent work Reasonable rates. Tel. 536-7167.MODELUN IS ALIVE!Model UN Meeting Tomorrow 1/8/83 IHA 10:30a.m. Classified AdsJEAN PIERRE RAMPALTickets on sale now for Jan 17 performance $9Rm 210 Ida Noyes.POLARITY MASSAGEBalance your subtle, life-renewing-energieswith a Polarity Balancing Session. Non-sexualBob Rueter 324-7530 for info or appointment.LANGUAGE COURSESthough Chicago Cluster of Theological Schoolsat the Lutheran School of Theology (on 55thSt.) Professional instruction by experiencedteachers and/or native speakers in FREN¬CH/GERMAN/LATIN/SPANISH. Freesrange from $80 for 10 hours of instruction perquarter to$220 for 50 hours. SEE BELOW FORSPECIF ICS or CALL CCTS: 667-3500 ext. 266.GERMAN COURSESthrough CCTS at LSTC, Room 203.1 Twoquarter course (1st Otr) Beg. Jan 10,83 Mo7:30-9:30; Fre: $110.II Two-Quarter Course (2nd Otr) Beg. Jan 11,83 Tue. 7:30-9:30, Fee: $110.III Advance Reading. Beginning Jan. 5, 83Wed. 7:30 9:30; Fee: $110.IV 15 Week INTENSIVE. Beginning Jan. 10, 83Mo/Wed 12:15-2:00; Fee: $220.V Conversational German by appt. For in-fo/reg call instructor G.F. Miller PhD (nativespeaker) 363 1384 or CCTS: 667-3500x266.FRENCH COURSEthrough CCTS at LSTC Beg. sessions Jan 11, 7-9, RM 206 For info/reg call instructor S.Pocock 955-9185or CCTS 667-3500 ext. 266.LATIN COURSEthrough CCTS at LSTC by appointment. CallFather Zborowski 324-2626 or CCTS 667-3500ext.266.SPANISH COURSESthrough CCTS at LSTCI BEGINNING SPANISH: Tue 6-7:30 Rm 203,Fee $80. Beginning Jan 11, 83. For info/reg callinstructor K. Beckie 947-0203 or CCTS 667-3500ext. 266.II INTERMEDIATE SPANISH: Tue. 5-6:30,Rm. 206, Fee $80 Beginning Jan 11, 83 For in¬fo/reg call instructor C. Rosario 288-8389 orCCTS 667 3500 ext. 266.Gnfuifc-lE^JWZlHokanson Real Estate Co.CHESTERTON, INDIANACall Rick (219) 926-2176or Chicago 493-615345 MINUTESFROM HYDE PARK...Quiet, privacy, throughthe woods into hiddenfields perfect for horses...52 acres, some in virgintimber - about 14 tillable.Useable 4 bedroom house,barn, & former artist studio.$150,000(Taxes S300°°/year)The Chicago Maroon—Friday, January 7, 1983—23Poetry on the Wind:The Art of Chinese Fansfrom the Ming and Ch ’ing DynastiesJanuary 6 - February 20,1983The David and Alfred Smart Gallery5500 South Greenwood AvenueHours: Tues.-Sat. 10-4Sun, noon-4Fan Paintings at Noon:A Non-Caloric AlternativeA series of informal gallery talks related to the current exhibition, bygraduate students in te Department of Art, will be given on three con¬secutive Wednesdays at 12:15 p.m.: Jan. 12, 19, and 26. Meet in SmartGallery lobby. What sets a Hair PerformersPerm from the rest? Quality. AHair Performers Perm- isstronger, healthier, and longerlasting. It's thick, shiny andnatural looking And, it adds thecontrol and support you'vealways wanted but neverthought you could have. Let thePerm Professionals design theperm style that's just for you.We Don't Promise A GreatPerm. We Guarantee ItlNow, through February 28, all HairPerformers Perms will be50% OFFReg. $30.00 - $60.00NOW $15.00- $30.00Hair Shaping and Styling NOT includedin Perm prices.hair performers©The Hair Performers,THE FROG & PE AC His no longer the Frog & Peach youmay remember, but we are—OPEN—Featuringexpertly preparedfood—freshingredients only •Potato Pancakes•Fettucine Alfredo •Quiche•Sandwiches•Spinach Cheddar Soup •Espresso & Cappiecinno•Cheesecake, fresh lemonade, etcetera“It’s not expensive to eat well”HOURS: 11:30 AM - 8 PM MON-SATIDA NOYES HALL - 1ST FLOOR