-grey city SportsINEFFABLEgcj cover-' IM basketball rankingspage 17—The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 35 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 11, 1983Washington promises opengovernment, ‘racial harmony’PHOTO BY DAN BRESLAUUS Rep. Harold Washington, candidate for the Democratic no¬mination for Chicago mayor, spoke here yesterday. By Cliff GrammichSpeaking before an overflowcrowd yesterday at Breasted Hall,US Rep. Harold Washington, aHyde Park resident and a candi¬date for the Democratic mayoralnomination, spoke on the future ofChicago.Washington had spoken in thisPublic Policy Lecture Series lastOctober before declaring his candi¬dacy for mayor. Mayor JaneByrne and State’s Attorney Rich¬ard M. Daley, two other candidatesfor the Democratic nomination,spoke in the series last month.In his remarks, Washington saidhe believed that Chicago can moveforward in future years with a4th Ward campaign keys oncrime, economic woes centersBy Cliff GrammichAll eight candidates for 4th WardAlderman — Maurice Perkins,Toni Preckwinkle, Muhuri Fahara,incumbent Timothy C. Evans, Ex¬cell Jones, Betty Booker, RonniTerry, and Michael W. Smith —met in a forum last Monday at theChicago Osteopathic Hospital.Each candidate made an openingstatement and then addressedeight issues from questions select¬ed by the audience before the de¬bate.Perkins, in his opening state¬ment, sharply criticized incum¬bent Evans. Perkins accusedEvans of “destroying” the 4thWard, and said that the word’s tro¬ubles include unemployment, drugaddiction, alcoholism, and real es¬tate and city service problems. Heaccused Evans of a “lack of lead¬ership” in dealing with these prob¬lems.Preckwinkle identified herself asthe “independent Democratic can¬didate for 4th Ward alderman.”She mentioned her experience as ateacher in public schools on theSouth Side and her involvement asa volunteer at the YMCA and as atutor. She said that the 4th Wardneeds an independent alderman toaddress the needs of the communi¬ty. She also said she believes theward needs a full-time alderman todeal with its diverse communitiesand their needs.Purina challenged the crowd toexamine the failure of the presentaldermanic administration. WhileFahara said he believes that some5th Ward programs have benefi¬ted the 4th Ward, he said he doesnot believe that the Ward has hadresponsible leadership. He saidthat his lifelong 4th Ward resi¬dence has helped him see what theward’s needs are.Having heard two blistering at¬tacks on his tenure as alderman,Evans defended his record. Hesaid that despite the 4th Ward’s having been “written off,” he hasworked to improve its employmentopportunities, housing, recreation¬al facilities, senior citizens' ser¬vices, and has made efforts to pro¬vide several “anchors” in thearea’s economic development,such as the Hyde Park Hilton andother commercial developments.Jones, in her opening statement,mentioned her residence of 30years in the Hyde Park and Ken¬wood neighborhoods. She said thatthe city’s biggest problems areracism and unemployment. Shesaid that reducing racism will alsohelp alleviate unemployment.Jones attacked the police and firedepartments for not serving theward's housing projects. She alsoattacked patronage, crime prob¬lems, poor administration of thecity's cable television codes, hous¬ing problems, and excessive taxa¬tion.Booker noted that she has livedin the 4th Ward for 22 years. Shepromised to be accessible and hon¬est to voters of the 4th Ward. Shealso vowed to “share power” withthe ward's constituents and to give“time and energy” to the office.She urged voters to understand the“real issues” of the 4th wardrace.Terry began his statement bysaying that the ward has “lots andlots of problems,” especially in theCHA projects in the ward. Headded that two major problemsare unemployment and rape. Hesaid President Reagan's economicpolicies have hurt the Ward, butthat the majority of the Ward’sproblems existed before Reagantook office.Smith said that he is a native ofChicago and of the ward and saidhe has lived in the ward longerthan any of the candidates He saidthat the 4th Ward is being “heldhostage” by the Regular Demo¬cratic Organization in the northernend and by the Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent PrecinctOrganization in the southern endHe blamed Evans for the decline ofbusiness districts along 39th, 43rd,and 47th streets.Perkins was the first to addressthe issue of crime in the Ward'sneighborhoods. Perkins said thathe had fought in past years againstcrime in the ward. He attacked theother candidates for not being ac¬tive in fighting crime. Preckwinklesaid that the obligation of an aider-man is to work with policeContinued on page 16 “modicum of change.” In Chica¬go’s future, Washington sees the“downgrade” of the city’s Demo¬cratic “Machine” as Chicagomoves away from machine politicsand into the mainstream.Washington pledged an “opengovernment” as mayor of Chicago,one he said would be open to all in¬terest groups, and would not beused solely for the interests of oneparticular group.He further pledged to involveboth labor and business in futuregovernment, saying each has “asignificant role to play” in thecity’s economic future. He saidthat “business is disenchanted”with the performance of the Byrneadministration, saying that busin¬esses receive little return in cityservices for the taxes they pay,and that crime inhibits employeesfrom working in the city.Washington accused Byrne ofhaving no economic program.Byrne has said the municipal re¬port “Chicago: 1982” is indeed acomprehensive economic plan forChicago's future. Daley also hasaccused the mayor of not ade¬quately planning for the city’s eco¬nomic future and has made futureeconomic development a key partof his platform.Washington said that power incity government must be sharedby all aspects of the city's populati-pon. He vowed to bring "qualifiedmanagers” into city government.In her defense, Byrne has said thatshe has settled upon a good munici¬ pal management team during heradministration. Daley has fre¬quently been critical of themayor’s “revolving door” admin¬istration.Answering criticisms that he hasbeen running a racial campaign,Washington said that his campaignwas “not a ticket of race” but acampaign of “racial harmony.”He was critical of the presentmayoral administration, sayingthat it has used such city agenciesas the Board of Education and theChicago Housing Authority as “ra¬cial battlegrounds.” He promisedas mayor to maintain “racial andethnic harmony.” Some critics ofWashington, have accused him ofrunning a campaign of “racial po¬larization.” However, Washingtondenied these charges, saying thatif “racial polarization” is in thecampaign, it has not been a resultof his efforts.Washington also said that newrevenues are needed for the city’sbudget. He mentioned four specificareas of city financing which needattention: the Board of Education;the Regional Transportation Au¬thority; the current city budgetwhich he said is balanced onlythrough the use of one-time reve¬nues; and state aid to cities, whichhas been cut during Illinois' cur¬rent revenue crisis. He labelledByrne's claims to have corrected abillion dollar city debt and to havebalanced the budget this year asContinued on page 16SECC seeks to tear down YMCABy Koyin ShihThe South East Chicago Com¬mission (SECCi is making an ef¬fort to have the Hyde Park YMCAbuilding either securely renovatedor demolished. The building, locat¬ed at 1400 East 53rd St., has beenabandoned and closed for almosttwo and a half years. MichaelMurphy, executive director ofSECC is urging the MetropolitanYMCA of Chicago to enforce a 24-hour security plan on the HydePark YMCA buildingMurphy’s action was promptedafter neighborhood parents com¬plained that local high school stu¬dents are illegally using the board-ed-up YMCA building as a hangoutfor underage drinking and mari¬juana smoking. The building adja¬cent to the YMCA, 5230 SouthBlackstone Ave., is also vacantand decaying Both buildings areowned by the Metropolitan YMCAof Chicago.John Casey. Metropolitan YMCApresident, announced that securityhas been increased. Meanwhile,3-W Co., a development group, isundergoing complete sale arrange¬ments. John Casey has expressedhis concern for the building andwould like to see it demolished.This recurrent issue over the finalfate of the two hazardous buildings may be settled by February 1984 assoon as final sale agreements canbe made. Possible agreementswere presented in housing court onFeb. 7.Philip Elmes, local partner is3-W, said that the buildings w ill berenovated or torn down as soon asthey legally belong to 3-W Realiz¬ing the community's concern overthe poor status and danger of thebuildings, Elmes said decisionswill be made within two to threemonths after the buildings belonglegally to 3-W. 3-W presently has acontract with the YMCA.Robert Mason, a representativeof SECC. said, “We d like to see it(the building) renovated or torndown. It is hazardous to the com¬munity People have ways of re¬moving the boards and going in¬side. There are indications thatpeople have even been living init.”Housing department officialshave said they want the buildingstorn down Deputy Housing Com¬missioner Louis Pagones said inOctober that 3-W had not offeredany feasible financial plans for amixed-use apartment retail designthat 3-W had spoken about in thepast.In January, the Hyde Park-Ken-wood Conservation Community Council (HPKCCC) had been con¬cerned with 3-W’s timetable on anyplans for the Hyde Park YMCAbuilding. The HPKCCC vice-chair¬man proposed a resolution to putthe YMCA and any potential pur¬chaser on notice by Feb. 1984. TheHPKCCC voted unanimously forthe resolution. The communitywho has been expressing concernfor the past two years may soonsee more auspicious developmentsfor the two buildings.YMCA building on 53rd St.IMAKELATE NIGHTSGREAT NIGHTSATMORRY’SDELIFROM 7:00 PM - 10 PM• Jumbo Turkeysandwiches• Jumbo ItalianSausage sandwichesCOME TO MORRY’S• Great Food• Incredible low prices• Fantastic savings• Friendly serviceMORRY’S LATENIGHT SPECIAL“BEST BUY IN TOWN”MORRY’S DELI5500 S. Cornell EXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES • MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONINGENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TO'PARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241-622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLEThe University of ChicagoGraduate School of BusinessandThe Department of Economics“North-South Economic RelationsAnd the World Economy”ITT Key Issues Lecture byJagdish N. BhagwatiArthur Lehman Professor of EconomicsDirectorInternational Economics Research CenterColumbia University4 P.M.Tuesday, February 15, 1983Social Sciences Research BuildingRoom 1221126 East 59th StreetBlack American LawStudents Association PresentsA PANEL DISCUSSION• Norval Morris, Prof, of Law, Univ. of Chicago• Sen. William Marovitz, D., 12th dist.• Eileen Springer, Director, Victim/WitnessCounselling ProgramVICTIMS OF VIOLENT CRIME:THE ILLINOIS RESPONSETIME: 4:00-6:00 pm PLACE: Univ. of Chicago Law SchoolThursday Seminar Room IIFebruary 17 1111 E. 60th St. RockefellerChapelccumernucii otsrviueof Holy Communion10 amDiscussion Class:‘Castanets in the Cathedral”10 amReligious InstructionFor Children11 amUniversity Religious ServiceFRANK E. 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Box 7739Phoenix, Arizona 85011Order by number Enclose cash, money order or acheck, (Checks require 14 days additional to clear.(Add $1 00 for postage If you order two or more items,we will pay all mailing chargesSend me items III III IV V (Circle your choice)Name Price of booksAddress PostageCity Stste Zip Total2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983 bnmmNewsCo-op supermarketaverts strike,pay raise the IRS would consider the difference to betaxable income.Spencer is doubtful that the new regula¬tions will ever be implemented, and said Astrophysicist Schramm to speakon the origin of the universeBy Steve ShandorEmployees at the Hyde Park Co-op haveaccepted an offer from the Hyde Park Co¬operative Society to share profits for this fi¬scal year rather than to receive a pay in¬crease. In making the offer to head off astrike at the supermarket, the Co-op’s man¬agement stated that the Co-operative Soci¬ety simply couldn’t afford the $300,000 that apay increase would have cost.According to the Hyde Park Herald, theCo-op’s board of directors met with theunion’s negotiators just two days before theunion's contract was to expire and made theoffer. On Jan. 31, the last day under the oldcontract, the Co-op’s employees voted 61 to58 to accept the offer.Under the plan, half of any profit made inthe grocery division of the Co-op (aftertaxes and after a dividened is paid to share¬holders) will be distributed among thestore’s 119 union employees. A union spokes¬man noted that if the net profit exceeds$200,000 at the end of this fiscal year, theunion will probably try to renegotiate thecontract.Given the current financial position of theCo-op, it is unlikely that there will be muchprofit, if any, to be divided among the em¬ployees. From Aug. 1 to Dec. 31, 1982, theCo-op’s grocery division lost $62,165 on salesof almost $7.5 million.Asked if the Co-op could reasonably ex¬pect to make up these losses during the lastseven months of the fiscal year, the Co-op’sgeneral manager, Gilbert Spencer, said“We hope to,’’ but also noted that “Januarysales were down quite a bit.”The Co-op will incur higher bookkeepingexpenses if new IRS regulations are imple¬mented. The new' regulations would requireco-ops to keep two sets of books, one forsales to members and another for sales tonon-members. If sales to non-members areused to offset losses on sales to members. that the IRS has made the same suggestionsfor years. Nevertheless, Co-op attorneyLeon Despres has recommended “a sharpand dramatic increase in memberships” toprepare for the proposed regulations.Spencer said that the Co-op receives a few-new memberships every month, but that theCo-op “will step that up” if a membershipdrive occurs.B-ball hoop dunkedin Ida Noyes gymIrene Conley, director of the Office of Stu¬dent Activities, closed the Ida Noyes gym¬nasium Tuesday after a basketball back-board fell. No one was injured, but the floorwas damaged.Conley closed the gym so that the strengthof other backboards’ supports could be test¬ed.The gym will be open tonight for HannaGray’s party for the College, and Saturdayfor facilities pass holders.Henry Hyde to speakon Reagan, abortionThe Chicago Federalist Society has invit¬ed Representative Henry Hyde (R, Ill.), aco-sponsor of the Human Life Bill whichwould define human life as existing from themoment of conception, to speak on the topic“Reaganomics, Abortion and the State ofthe Union.”Hyde is opposed to abortion, and the HydeAmendment to budget appropriations cur¬rently prohibits federal money from financ¬ing abortions from women on Medicaid. Thelecture will be given today at 12:30 p.m. inLaw School Classroom IV. By Tom EldenDavid Schramm will give a lecture titled“The Origin of the Universe” Sunday, Feb.13 at Woodward Court at 8:30 p.m.Schramm is the Louis Block Professor in thephysical sciences, chairman of the depart¬ment of astronomy and astrophysics, andprofessor of physics.David SchrammThe hour-long lecture will be “non-techni-cal" and will examine the basic questions ofthe origin of the universe and its implica¬tions.“It s esoteric but it’s the kind of questionwe all worry about: why are we here,”Schramm said. “It’s one of the great philo¬sophical questions of all time.”Schramm will discuss the Big Bangtheory and its refinements in the past tenyears. This theory addresses the questionsof how and when the universe and its ele¬ments were created. In addition Schrammwill look at some of the philosophical impli¬cations of the theory.Besides examining the Big Bang theory. Schramm will discuss the whole science in¬volved in investigating the origin of the uni¬verse. He will stress that the methods ofboth astrophysics and particle physics arecrucial to understanding the universe. Inlooking at the universe in these ways, onemust combine ideas about the nature ofmatter with astrophysics in what he refersto as the ‘ grand unification” of both studiesand causes.Schramm has been at the University foreight years and is one of the founders of thecombined astrophysics/particle physics ap¬proach to the study of the universe.Schramm is also considered controversialamong some creationists for his non¬religious views of the universe’s beginnings.Before giving a similar lecture at TexasA&M. the local school board banned the lec¬ture’s advertisements because it contradict¬ed Creationist beliefs.Schramm is quoted in the Guinness Bookof World Records for his estimation of 15 bil¬lion years for the age of the universe.Schramm's lecture is the third in theWoodward Court Lecture Series for thisquarter.Names sought forAmerican ScientistThe University of Chicago Chapter ofSigma AT. the Scientific Research Society, isseeking to identify the names of scientists indeveloping countries or those with exchangecontrol regulations to whom the Society'sjournal American Scientist may be donatedEach chapter may nominate three individu¬als to whom the journal will be sent free forone year. Nominations may be sent to Vir¬ginia Muhonen. Department of Anatomy,Room 107B.K U I J KENT R 1 OBarthold Kuijken • fluteWieland Kuijken • viole de gambaRobert Kohnen • harpsichordTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOEARLY MUSIC SERIESSATURDAY • FEBRUARY 12,1983 • 8:00 p.m.Mandel Hall • 37th & University Avenue19 / UC student, $5, • all seats reservedinformation and tickets at Department of Music Concert Office,5845 S. Ellis, 60637; 962-8068 / and at Mandel Hall Ticket Center,962-7300, one week preceeding the concert.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983—3LettersWhat purpose IHC?To the editor:I have just completed half a year asGreenwood representative to the Inter-House Council. During my term of servicemany questions have come to my mind overthe validity of this organization.As stated in the Student Information Man¬ual, the purpose of Inter-House Council is togive dormitory residents a “voice in han¬dling unique concerns in college life,’’ and toprovide “communication and participationat all levels.’’ Greenwood is not withoutproblems, and I was hoping that perhapssome might be handled through consecutivemeetings, I brought up a problem which Ithought the Council could help with. Notonly did I receive no help, but at the secondmeeting, when I brought up a problem, theCouncil President exclaimed “Greenwoodagain?.” So much for “communication andparticipation.”This would not have bothered me at all if Ifelt that the Council served other purposes.The Council sponsored one activity Autumnquarter: it showed “The Paper Chase.” Awinter event was planned, a Monte CarloCasino night. This wouldn't even have got¬ten to the planning stages if not for the ef¬forts of the IHC Vice-president, MichaelAronson. However, Mr. Aronson, wasthwarted by the general apathy and disor¬ganization that pervades the group, and thewinter event was postponed until spring, forno reason except that the Council didn’twant to decide which Ida Noyes roomsshould be used.So what purpose does IHC achieve, exceptfor providing resume entries for its of¬ficers? Why are we allocating money (atlast count, IHC had $1900 in its account) to agroup that’s afraid to try to use it? Unlesssolutions to the inefficiency of this organiza¬tion are found, I suggest it be disbanded,and its budget be reallocated to the individu¬al dorms, which are at least organizedenough to make use of the money.David GormanGreenwood residentNeed student inputTo the editor:Now' that the recent controversy over con¬tinuous registration fees appears to be sub¬siding, broader concerns with the structureand quality of graduate education remain tobe addressed. SAGE (Student Associationon Graduate Education) would like to pointout at least one fundamental structuralproblem which needs immediate attention.This is the problem of input. There are fewif any channels for graduate student feed¬back to facultv and administration. Tradi¬ tionally, input has flowed through specificdepartment-level structures, but 1) far toofew departments have any mechanism fortaking account of graduate student sugges¬tions and responses, and 2) many matters(such as, for example, the Baker Commis¬sion report) transcend departmental inter¬ests, and it is not always possible to insurethat student input is transmitted by the de¬partments on up.Nor is this problem unrecognized withinthe administration at the University of Chi¬cago. As one administration source noted,students at this institution are often of theopinion that things are being done not forthem but to them. The result has been, formany graduate students, not anxiety butrather anomie. SAGE does not wish to seethings done for, but rather with graduatestudents, things which will enable the Uni¬versity of Chicago to maintain its (de¬servedly) fine reputation.Critical to this maintenance are twoaspects of student input. The first followsthe form already laid out—that is, studentsmust join, meet with, or, if necessary,create the department-level structureswhich allow close work with departmentfaculty on issues of immediate concern.At the same time, there is a growing ne¬cessity for a University-wide student orga¬nization or coalition, which would have thetask of gathering and distributing informa¬tion on changes in the broader universitywhich have impact on all graduate students.The coalition would also have the functionof taking a sense of the student body andproviding independent feedback to adminis¬tration. In this way, the student body of theUniversity can work closely with both facul¬ty and administration to ensure continuingexpansion and development of high-qualityeducation.We wish to emphasize to the students ofthis university that input is necessary andthat if the University of Chicago is to avoidlater problems in the development of gradu¬ate education, mechanisms must be set upfor taking account of students. This is not achallenge to the administration- it is a callto action on the part of students.SAGE wishes to offer itself as a forum forthe development of such a broad student co¬alition. While the organization, as currentlyconceived, would be independent of the Uni¬versity per se v that is, not an administrativeor student government committee), we wel¬come all comers, including faculty and ad¬ministration representatives, to voice theirconcerns about the quality of graduate edu¬cation at an open meeting to be held at 4:00p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 23, in SocialSciences 122.The Student Associationon Graduate Education (SAGE)THREE .SAUSAoEPizzas, AND... OH YEAH,A TAB./o* ZbThe 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 EditorJeffrey TaylorNews EditorWilliam RauchNews Editor Margo HablutzelFeatures EditorCliff GrammichSports EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Nadine McGannGrey City Journal EditorKeith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorSteve ShandorCopy Editor Wally DabrowskiProduction ManagerSteve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerStaff: Edward Achuck, Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, Jeanne Chapman, John Collins,Kahane Corn, Purnima Dubey, Maeve Dwyer, Tom Elden, Pat Finegan, CarenGauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, Jesse Halvorsen, Joe Holtz, Keith Hor¬vath, Jim Jozefowicz, Mark Kramer, Linda Lee, Kathleen Lindenberger, Jane Look,Frank Luby, Nick Lynn, Bill Mudge, Jack Ponomarev, Amy Richmond. Craig Rosen¬baum. Yousef Sayeed. Koyin Shih, Nick Varsam, John Vispoel, Guy Ward. GeorgeWoodbury , Andy Wrobel. Kittle Wyne.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983 Put up or shut upTo the editor:To say that Mr. Levergood and Mr. Kostuch are archetypal thoughtless future-fa¬scists may be somewhat of an oversimplifi¬cation. But, to discuss registration for thedraft in purely mechanical terms as a prere¬quisite for receiving financial aid, is ofcourse a most thoughtless premise for theirmanifesto (Maroon, Feb. 4) Registering forthe draft is a big moral question. Their aca¬demic essay cannot cope with the complex¬ity of our three-dimensional lives. My oppo¬sition to the law does not stem from a“misunderstanding” about education anddemocracy, nor does it result “from a dis¬like of America.” I love this country. But, Iam willing to fight for what is best aboutit.Levergood and Kostuch seem to advocatecomplacency as the duty of good citizens.They should stay seated on their brains ifthat is the best they can do. But, stay out ofthe way of the people who have the courageto look at the country they love and see whatthey can do to make it better.First, Mr. Levergood and Mr. Kostuch,your premise, that registration for the draftis no big deal, is wrong. Second, financialaid is not bestowed on individuals by natureor God and maybe not by the constitutionand luckily not by you either. Those thathave made federal aid to students a realitysee the need for students from families withless money than others to be able to go toschool, independent of sex, religion, partyalligiance, etc. These students should be al¬lowed to become whatever they have the po¬tential for. If they cannot live with goingalong with any part of the draft process letthe police harass them. Third, to assumethat not registering means that one is notwilling to defend their homeland shows anincredible lack of insight into real life dy¬namics. Vietnam, Afghanistan, El Salva¬dor, Lebanon are pretty far from Chicago.Fourth, you may not like the term “deputyG-men” but it will do. Once the Universitybecomes the instrument of penal law, to en¬force draft registration, it sets a very dan¬gerous precedent. Intellectual freedom, thepursuit of truth and meaning, pursuits thatyou say you value, cannot exist in an envi¬ronment of fear and mistrust.The issue is not “whether the Universityshould respect the law” as you put it. Theissue is, how will the University maintain itstradition of integrity and academic credibil¬ity in the face of a new and despicable pieceof legislation? This question cannnot beside-stepped. Replacing federal aid withUniversity or special fund money is one via¬ble alternative. You say this is “encourag¬ing the disobediance of a reasonable law.”Reasonable? Says who? Why does offeringalternatives encourage disobediance?I applaud any effort made by the Univer¬sity and its students to support those withthe courage to face moral questions directlyand to answer these questions with theseriousness of adult citizens. Your excerptfrom Weber about facing the realities of lifeand measuring up to them internally cer¬tainly supports the dissenters among usmore than it does your argument.How dare you invoke the tyranny of themajority in this instance, especially whenyou have no proof of a consensus. Thewomen in the College, while they may thinkabout this problem, are not at this timeforced to register or not to register. As forthe male students who have had to makethis choice, their hesitance to run aroundtelling junior DAs like yourselves about it,does not mean they do not exist. I wish yourtwo not unintelligent minds would take thisquestion to its end. You picked up the ballbut have fumbled badlyFinally we are all responsible for our actsof omission as well as commission Mr Le¬ vergood and Mr. Kostuch put up or shut up.Do you believe in a large standing military?Do you believe the problems facing the 21stcentury are best answered by the marines?Do you believe the best American expert isviolence? What about non-military nationalservice? What about feeding people (evencommunists)? Is this the best we can do? Asa nation? As a State? As individuals? Haveyou thought for a moment about these ques¬tions? Isn’t the draft obsolete? Isn’t regis¬tration for the draft obsolete? As the “bestand the brightest” you are obliged to thinkbefore you set public policy. Your essay ad¬vocates abandoning certain people withstrong beiefs and casting them out of ourcommunity of thoughtful inquiry and dia¬logue. Our democracy is supposed to be ableto tolerate a broader range of thought andactions than our totalitarian counterpart,clearly that makes you uncomfortable.What a shame.Jesse HalvorsenFourth year student in the CollegeWe got heartTo the editor :On this past Tuesday, Feb. 8, 1983, theMaroon published a story charging that “anunofficial war” has been declared by one ofthe two houses selling carnations to be deliv¬ered on (Valentine’s Day)." The articlefalsely states that “in an attempt to under¬cut Upper Wallace’s sales, Shorey is sellingcarnations for 99c each.” Shorey and the UCDemocrats had originally sold their carna¬tions for $1.25 and 99c per each additionalflower plus free cards and delivery. When itwas learned that Upper Wallace would enterthe market selling carnations at $1.00 apiece, charging an additional 25c for cards,Shorey and the UC Dems considered lower¬ing their price for the first carnation, but themove was overwhelming and bitterly reject¬ed by vast majority of Shorey members onthe grounds that such a move would alienateand embitter our customers and otherhouses. Shorey elected not to lower itsprices on the grounds of its image. Further,in an attempt to share the market, Shoreyand the UC Dems voluntarily and unilateral¬ly cancelled their plans to sell at Burton-Judson and Woodward, competing only intheir home dorm of Pierce, while facing nocompetition at Cobb and the Shoreland.Rather than “declaring war” on carnations,Shorey House and the UC Dems feel thatthey have been more than fair in not lower¬ing their prices, and voluntarily resigninghalf of the market to Upper Wallace. This isanything but belligerence. The story, whichis overwhemingly slanted against Shorey,and the UC Dems closes with the words that“those who have already bought Shorey’sflowers will probably not be able to obtain a26< refund.” These words make Shorey andthe UC Dems appear villainous, and are en¬tirely unbased in fact. Shorey House and theUC Dems are not concerned with the effectthe Maroon article had on our sales, only inwhat it did to our reputations. The chargesappearing against Shorey House and the UCDems are false, and we demand that theMaroon print an apology and a retraction.Bill SullivanCarnation Sale Chairman, Shorey HouseUC DemsEditor’s reply: The information containedin the newsbrief “War on carnations’’ wasgiven to the Maroon by a member of ShoreyHouse, who called after the newspaper wentto print with the information that the priceswould not be rolled back. Also, Upper Wal¬lace does not charge for Valentine cardsbought with a carnation, and does notcharge for delivery. Plus, Mr Sullivan haschosen to ignore the fact that the articlestated Shorey House delivers outside thehousing system, which Upper Wallace doesnot.ViewpointsEducation and registration: U of C’s responsibilityBy Nicholas K. Sauter and David EichenthalThe University of Chicago is currently at the center of aheated debate over a new law which links draft registrationwith federal aid for cc lle4>e i ..a: ‘;. Under regulations pr >I vsed two v ;eks ago, draft-aged male students must proveL they h„ve registered before they can receive federalassistance, including Pell Grants, Supplemental Educa¬tional Opportunity Grants, National Direct Student Loans,Guaranteed Student Loans, and College Work Study jobs.Before the university can proc jss financial aid applicationsfor next year, it must decide whether or not to replace thefederal aid which non-registrants will lose. Although theUniversity will have to make a difficult moral decision andabsorb substantial costs to replace this aid, we believe thatit has a clear obligation to do so.Replacement aid has been opposed on the grounds thatnon-registrants are, “irresponsible, unpatriotic, contemp¬tuous, lazy, or cowardly.” We certainly do not condone non¬registration. In fact, we have both registered for the draft.However, while we do not agree with their actions, we real¬ize that many non-registrants have intelligent and thoughtf¬ul reasons for w'hat they do. They claim that draft registra¬tion discriminates against men, women, the poor, theuneducated, minority groups, and even draft aged youths ingeneral. Aside from these legal issues, many non-regis¬trants cite a variety of political, ethical, and religious rea¬sons.Some critics of non-registration have argued that some¬one who is morally opposed to war can stay within the lawby applying for conscientious objector status. But conscien¬tious objector status is not the answer for everyone. For in¬stance, if someone is opposed to nuclear war but not to con¬ventional war, he will not qualify for conscientious objectorstatus. Therefore, he has no legal recourse for voicing hisobjection to military service because of the military’s de¬ployment of nuclear weapons.Non-registrants must pay a price to defend their deeplyheld values. They must be willing to face the legal conse¬quences of peaceful non-cooperation, in this case, five yearsin jail and a $10,000 fine. But the non-registrant can be com¬forted by the knowledge tha peaceful non-cooperation is animportant part of America’s democratic legacy. It has be¬come a recognized method of expressing an unpopular opin¬ion in order to promote peaceful change. Such non-coopera¬tion w as a cornerstone of the civil rights movement as ledby Dr. Martin Luther King. King was willing to sacrifice hisliberty on numerous occasions in his quest to achieve the reforms which would lead to equal rights for blacks. If ourdemocracy is to remain healthy we must allow it to undergopeaceful change, and to this end, we must see to it that themultiplicity of opinions in America is preserved.The University has an institutional commitment to ad¬vance education for the betterment of society. Democracyitself is fostered by the learning process. For it is in thelearning process that issues are debated in a thoughtful dis¬course. In order to maintain a multiplicity of opinions with¬in this debate, the University must foster all ideas, not justthe politically popular ones. By denying financial aid, andtherefore education to non-registrants, the federal govern¬ment prevents them from contributing to this debate. Thegovernment may have the right to do so. However, if theUniversity fails to replace this aid, it will be violating itscommunity responsibilities and will unwillingly help tolimit the diversity of thought which makes American life acherished good. The University should be willing to pay thecost of preventing this disastrous consequence.We must stress that the University need not agree withnon-registrants in order to provide replacement aid. TheUniversity can and should remain neutral on the difficultissues surrounding the draft registration law. The Universi¬ty should merely recognize the possibility that non-regis¬trants are legitimate members of the community of ideas.This alone is sufficient reason for the University to continueto support their education.There are other forceful reasons why the Universityshould provide financial aid to non-registrants. The new fi¬nancial aid law discriminates against poor students. Itallows self-sufficient students to hold their values withmore impunity than those who are dependent on federal as¬sistance. In a similar fashion, the law discriminates againstminority groups, since a greater percentage of minoritystudents receive aid. We certainly do not propose that theUniversity violate the law because it is unjust, but we dosay that the University should render this unjust law har¬mless to its students by replacing federal aid.We believe that it is not only desirable to replace aid fornon-registrants, but that it is quite feasible as well. We canmake an estimated calculation of how much it will cost toreplace college aid. There are 2800 undergraduate. Ofthese, 60 percent are men, and if we accept the nationwidefigures, about ten percent of these have not registered. Thisgives us a total of one hundred and seventy non-registrants.According to College Aid officials, the average Universityof Chicago undergraduate receives $2900 in federal aid per year, which means Xhat the college will have to add nearly$500,000 to its financial aid budget.There are at least three means of funding available. Thefirst and probably the best is that the University could in¬crease the number of loans it makes by participating in theIllinois Higher Education Loan Authority (IHELAi. TheUniversity would use its endowment as collateral to issue abond; the money from the bond sale would be loaned to stu¬dents; and the interest on the loans would be used to pay theinterest on the bond. This is a good solution to the problemsince it involves no direct costs to the University. Its draw¬back is that it limits the amount of money that the Universi¬ty may borrow for other purposes. A second solution is thatthe University could give direct grants to non-registrants.When it awards grant assistance, it would simply not distin¬guish between regular financial need and need caused bythe loss of federal assistance. This does not mean that regis¬trants and women will receive less money. The Universityalready has a commitment to finance students’ educationIt would therefore meet non-registrants’ needs by increas¬ing the total grant budget, not by taking money from otherstudents. Of course, this means that the grant money wouldhave to come from the general University budget, and nec¬essarily reduce University services across the board. Forthis reason, we suggest that the University solicit funds spe¬cifically for the purpose of replacing non-registrant aid, asEarlham and Swarthmore Colleges have proposed. Finally,the University could increase indirect subsidies for term-time employment. This solution would also require the Uni¬versity to solicit additional funds, but it gives the addedconsolation that non-registrants would work for theirmoney.The current situation reminds us of the situation in the1950s, when the National Defense Student Loan programwas initiated. The legislation required students to take anoath of loyalty to the nation before they could receive aloan. The University of Chicago, along with other major un¬iversities. decided that this loan program violated its corevalues and therefore refused to participate in the program.We are again faced with legislation which threatens ourcore values — the very nature of free inquiry is compro¬mised by the new regulations. It is time for the Universityto take a stand on a controversial issue in order to strength¬en American education.Nicholas K. Sauter is a fourth year student in the Collegemajoring in Physics. David R Eichenthal is a third yearstudent in the College majoring in Public Affairs.WEDNESDAY, FEB. 16 • 8 PM • SWIFT LECTURE HALLBIOLOGY & ETHICS:IS THERE KNOWLEDGEWE SHOULD NOT HAVE?•LEON KASS:(Henry R. Luce Prof, in the College andProf, in the Committee on Social Thought) •JAMES SHAPIRO:(Prof. Dept, of Microbiology)• DR. RICHARD LANDAU:(Prof. Department of Medicine and the College) •JAMES WHITE:(Prof. Law School, the College, andCommittee on Ancient Med. World)•JAMES GUSTAFSON, moderator(University Prof. Divinity Schooland Committee on Social Thought)RECEPTION TO FOLLOW. THE CHICAGO ROUND TABLE IS A PROJECTOF THE ACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMM. OF STUDENT GOVERNMENT ANDHAS BEEN FUNDED BY SGFC & THE DEAN OF THE COLLEGE.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11. 1983—5HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson. Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve MetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 528-2858Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmJoin Us Now!WHERE ISHILLELCINEMA DANIEL VAX?THURSDAYFEBRUARY 177:30 PMIn Hebrew, with English &French subtitles. A storyof wry humor and gentleirony about two men’ssearch for a former classmate,lady’s man, brilliant studentand celebrated cad.HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 S. WOODLAWN AVE.Hillel Members $1.50/Others $2.50 What sets a Hair PerformersPerm from the rest? Quality. AHair Performers Perm isstronger, healthier, and longerlasting. It's thick, shiny andnatural looking. And, tt adds thecontrol and support you'vealways wanted but neverthought you could have. Let thePerm Professionals design theperm style that's just for you.permsaleOp©n We Don't Promise A GreatPerm. We Guarantee ItlNow, through February 28, all HairPerformers Perms will be50% OFFReg. $30.00 - $60.00(MOW $15.00- $30.00Hair Shaping and Styling NOT includedV>21 EAST 55thST.7 Days A Week!©The Hair Performers,THE FORUM ON LIBERAL LEARNING PRESENTSHistory and Culture atMaximum Scale:PROBLEMS IN THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF CIVILIZATIONSPART II Thursday, February 17 • 4:00 p.m. • Harper 284Citizenship as a Diacritical Marker ofWestern CivilizationJAMES REDFIELD — Professor, Department of Classics,Committee on Social Thought and The CollegeThe Temptation of the WestHARRY HAROOTUNIAN — Max Palevsky Professor in the College and Professor,Departments of History and Far Eastern Languages and CivilizationsRespondents: KARL J. WEINTRAUB — Thomas E. DonnelleyProfessor, Dept, of History and The CollegeMARVIN ZONIS — Associate Professor, Dept, of BehavioralSciences and The CollegeModerator: MARVIN MIKESELL, Dept, of Geography and The CollegeSHERRY WILL BE SERVED AFTERWARDS6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983GREY CITY JOURNAL11 February 1983«15th Yearby David MillerIt’s difficult to know just what to makeof Jeff Wall: Selected Works, an exhibit ofthree big blacklit color transparencies cur¬rently hanging in the Renaissance Soci¬ety’s Bergman Gallery on the fourth floorof Cobb Hall. The total image area may notbe significantly different in size from thatfound in a more customary showing ofmore numerous, smaller photographs, butbecause it is organized and presentedhere in only three works, and because twoof these avoid a great deal of detail, theentire show is seen and remembered withrelative ease. But: it seems for the mostpart to be uneasily silent.All art speaks to an audience, but not allart takes this involvement to be central toits aims. The difference is relative, butthese photographs concern themselvesand thus their audience with their ownmanner of discourse; and this is one not somuch of speaking ‘to’ but ‘with’ theviewer. Responsibility for their conse¬quent and also relative silence is alsoshared. But it may be unclear how this, amutual opacity, comes to be the problem.Turning to the pictures means in an im¬portant, overall way being turned away.Each represents its subject in a straightfor¬ward, almost plain fashion. But the sub¬jects seem odd, increasingly so the morethey are seen. The disjunction between theidiosyncratic character of what we see andthe apparently unexceptional character ofhow it is being made to be seen gives riseto disquietude.“Backpack”, the first, demonstrateshow slight this sense may be. It shows aboy of about 12 standing in a studio. Hewears a white shirt with red sleeves,white running shorts, white tube socksbanded with another, different shade ofred, white tennis shoes, slightly scuffedand, on his back, a large blue backpack.His posture indicates comfort and his facialexpression self-assurance and distance,these last read from the easy set of hismouth and the not unpleasant but notice¬ably uninvolved gaze of his eyes directlyinto the viewers’. We are at no loss to un¬derstand each of the elements we see, buttheir totality seems bent on making somepoint beyond immediate comprehension or(the thought occurs) no point at all. Thismay be no cause for serious concern; or itmight, particularly for those who noticethat the backpack is too large for a personof this size.Bafflement becomes quiet frustration in“Double Self-Portrait”, the second. Itshows the appearance of the artist in twoplaces in a silvery-gray, mostly emptyroom. The figure on the left wears a whiteshirt with rolled-up sleeves and dark redtrousers and stands, arms crossed, at theend of a dark red couch. The figure on theright stands a bit nearer the cam¬era/viewer, wears a light gray sweatshirtand dressy blue jeans, and places onehand on its hip and the other on the back ofa round white wicker chair at the bottomof the frame. Both figures look directlyand skeptically at the viewer. On the left,the more distanced figure with crossedarms offers through its closed stance andset jaw a relatively less inviting aspect.On the right, the closer, more open figureseems initally and from a distance to offera relatively more inviting proposition; itseems not thoroughly unthinkable that heoffers us the chair. But from a closer pointone discovers not only that the figure onthe right’s lips part and seem not unima¬ginably about to break into a sneer, butalso that the photograph is installed at aheight that precludes the possibility of re¬lating to these two imagined figures asequals. What had seemed almost to be ashy invitation turns out to be a clever deni¬al of the viewer’s claim upon the artist’s(in both senses) attention. A subtle insult,and one only reinforced by the realizationthat any subsequent indulgence in themore palatable view from a greater dis¬tance is tantamount to the viewer’s agree¬ment with a purposeful misrepresentation,perpetuated by the same person as is re¬presented in the photograph. “Double Self-Portrait” (detail): More Un¬invitingThe third, “Mimic”, depicts rather thanelicits a sense of insult. It shows three peo¬ple walking on a sidewalk between a com¬mercial warehouse and the street. On theoutside and left, a young oriental mandressed in a wrinkled but clean light grayshirt, olive green trousers, and blackshoes. A half-step behind and in thecenter, a scruffy-looking young white manwearing an orange t-shirt and a sleevelessLevis jean jacket, brown polyestertrousers, and black boots. He holds handswith a white woman a half-step behind himand on the right and inside, next to thebuilding; she wears an open white shirtRED over a white blouse, a brown leatherpurse, red shorts, open brown shoes, andan ankle bracelet. She squints into the sun,and is consequently unaware of the ges¬ture being made by her accomplice. Heuses the middle finger of his right hand topull tight the skin on the side of his headnext to his right eye, thus imitating the ra¬cially characteristic appearance of the ori¬ental man’s eyes, which appear aware ofthe intended comment. Altogether a small,but not unusual unkindness of the every¬day variety, remarkable for apparentlylittle else.The matter might end here, except thatthere are on the one hand nagging prob¬lems associated with something so techni¬cally superb that seems intent on saying solittle; and on the other, formal clues thatkeep the matter turning over in the mindwithout resolving anything. The use ofcolor is an excellent example of the latter.The largest part of each photograph isgiven over to cool shades: dark blues,blueish-grays, light grays, browns, lightblues. These are mainly the backgroundcolors and they facilitate the additionaluse in each photograph of more than oneshade of red. These are bright in “Back¬pack” and “Mimic" and somber in “DoubleSelf-Portrait” but it is not so much the indi¬vidual colors but their contrast that is im¬portant. The significance of this is not easi¬ly understood or stated, but has to do withsmall differences taking on large mean¬ings; compare this to the different inter¬pretations understandable from the ex¬pression on the face of the figure on theright in “Double Self-Portrait”, or thebackpack in “Backpack”, which is not ob¬viously but just a little too large for theboy.Recurring attention to small, publicimages provides evidence of another in¬stance of dead-end clues. These are, in“Backpack”, the “Adidas” logo on the running shorts; in “Double Self-Portrait”the lable, thrown slightly out of focus, onthe overturned blanket corner; in“Mimic”, the ‘no parking’ sign. These jumpout, partly because they have beenthoughtfully included in the spacial organi¬zation, partly because the images are ingeneral stripped of all such detail. Butthey do not of course mean simply whatthey are taken as symbols for in everydaylife; instead, these evoke an outer, com¬mercial, consumer world that would other¬wise be absent.Finally, the general arrangement of thepictorial space points to a third set ofshared relations, but one that is more com¬plicated. In “Backpack” the boy is cen¬tered horizontally in the lower two-thirdsof the space; the upper third is back¬ground. “Double Self-Portrait” keeps thisvertical arrangement — bottom two-thirds‘filled’, top third ‘blank’ — but adds an¬other arrangement for the horizontal di¬mension; the frame is divided verticallyonce in its center by the seam joining thetwo pieces of manufactured transparencymaterial and again a little to the right ofthis by the line formed by the corner of theroom. One figure appears in each half.“Mimic” uses the same horizontal divisionand again sees one party on each side.(There is no seam in “Backpack” becauseits width does not exceed that of the tran¬sparency material.) There is clearly astronger compositional association be¬tween the second and third pictures thanbetween the first and either of the others.The wicker chair in “Double Self-Portrait”serves through its placement the same for¬mal/structural function as the ‘look’ pass¬ing between the two men in “Mimic ”: thechair/look joins the two divided spaces.But the point is not simple identity, sincethe chair is/is not offered to the viewerwhile the white man clearly offers and theoriental man clearly acknowledges thecontinued on page 2RED AND ORANGE WALLS WONT WEAR“Backpack” (detail): Son of Jeff “Double Self-Portrait” (detail): Uninviting“Mimic” (detail): Insulted “Mimic”(detail): Insulting “Mimic” (detail): ObliviousOR TEARcontinued from page 1look. Similarity with difference.All of these — colors, public symbols,spacial relationships — begin after a whileto add up to something outside of and dif¬ferent from what we see in any of the pho¬tographs individually. This sort of ab¬stract or conceptual consideration isfacilitated through the demand made uponthe viewer by the show's installation: wecannot perceive the pictures together, wecan only imagine them together. Further,while their similarities are striking enoughto allow this to occur, their differences areobvious enough to prevent an unhindereddevelopment of some one or other patstatement of the show as a whole.Still, some things seem clear. The show issurely about seeing and being seen. Themovement from first to third is one of in¬creasing complexity of visual relations.And, most important, the relation ofviewer to image is constantly changing.We can court trouble by attempting tosay what these points mean when broughtto bear on each individual picture. The boyin ‘‘Backpack” is more totally seen thanany other human figure in the show. He isnot old enough to consciously choose howhe will appear, he is placed in an obviouslyand artificially constructed studio setting,and he is identified with the viewerthrough his pleasant expression and equaleye level. The viewer seems to see but is infact ‘seen’ by “Double Self-Portrait”; thisis the presentation of self-image as chal¬lenge, affront. Finally, the viewer is of¬fered in “Mimic” a privileged view of theimage/viewer relation in “Double Self-Portrait”: we see the act of being seen.It is clear also that, for anyone who hasseen the photographs, this basic accountmisses the interminable play of associa¬tions and inter-relations; and this points toa problem with our understanding of thenotion of ‘seeing’. Observe for instance theobvious fact that only “Mimic” offers a privileged view, the possibility of a narra¬tive construction. It is of the three the mostlike the bulk of instances of contemporary(not just ‘art’) photographic practice. Onedoes find different senses of its meaningat different distances, but once the ‘fact’of the matter is seen and acknowledged atclose proximity this image is the most easi¬ly (if incompletely) understood. This isupon reflection cause for a different sortof concern: if we see an example of theworld imitating and conceiving itself —that is, if we see an oriental man beingtold that his appearance makes him lesshuman than a Caucasian person — present¬ed in photographic form, that is to say,western technological form, then how dowe know that our relation to this re-pre¬sentation is not simply another instance ofthe same unkind, unfair, and untrue rela¬tion? I suspect there is no general answer;the answer depends instead upon theviewer’s patience with the photographand the viewer’s politics. There is no wayany individual photographic image can inthis world thoroughly inform conscious¬ness; individual images can only be used toadhere to or depart from formed con¬sciousness unless, of course, they take there-presentation and demystification ofconsciousness to be their goal. They look inthis instance a lot like what they attemptto show the inner workings of; hence“Mimic”.Jeff Wall comes eventually to be two dif¬ferent sorts of things. One is on the walland can be seen; the other is in the mindand can be thought. Neither can satisfyalone, and this seems to be the point; forhow else is one to understand a surfaceevocative of all sorts of worldly visual as¬sociations that nevertheless adds up tosomething other than a worldly sort ofsense? The problem is neither simply thatthese photographs depart from modernistart by not (arbitrarily) reproducing theworld nor simply that they embrace anequally but also obviously arbitrary man¬ner of working that calls into questionmodernist representation, but also thatboth of these aims seem ineffable to themodernist mind.GREY CfTY BRUNCH 5537 KIMBARK 2E 12:30 SUNDAY 2/13 y I TTTTTrr I T I ITT 1 T~TT~NTonight at 7:00 and 9:30: A specialshowing in MandelHall of the film you’ve all been waiting to see again.Harrison Ford & Karen Allen star in StevenSpielberg’s RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK.Tomorrow at 2:30: Another showing RAIDERS OFTHE LOST ARK, in Cobb Hall. Then, at 7:15 and 9:30pm, Andrzej Wajda’s MAN OF IRONSunday at 8:00 pm: Werner Herzog’sHEART OF GLASSAll films in Cobb Hall, 5811 S. Ellis,except for Friday night’s showingof RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK.Separate $2.00 admission for allshows. Phone 962-8575 for more in¬formation.M 11 11 DOC FILMS-H2—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALLooking at Women: Images of Women by Contem¬porary Artists“...A woman must continually watch herself. She isalmost continually accompanied by her own imageof herself...From earliest childhood she has beentaught and persuaded to survey herself continual¬ly-“And so she comes to consider the surveyor andthe surveyed within her as the two constituent yetalways distinct elements of her identity as awoman..." (John Berger, Ways of Seeing)On opening night last Friday the gallery was filledwith chic people, carefully presented men andwomen. I think they were spending more time look¬ing at one another than at the artwork. Yet, per¬haps that’s just the point of the show — such is life ture’s construction, limitation, and manipulation ofwomen? In other words, whose politics am I lookingat — the artists' or the gallery owners ?Perhaps I am wrong to focus so much on thegender of the artists? Included in the show areworks by both men and women that reveal a sensi¬tivity to the problem/act of visually represent¬ing/looking at women. I saw the show later in theweek when the gallery was virtually empty. Thistime the experience left me less confused by the in¬tentions of the artists and the curators and moretroubled by the issue of looking at women. ... I thinkI’ll return to Artemisia Gallery, 9 W Hubbard.Through 30 Feb: Tue-Sat, 11-5. 751-2016 A gallerytour and lecture by Naomi Vine will be given thisSat, 12 Feb at 2. Free — LKunder lookism. One gallery goer commented that“this is the hippest crowd...”Under the circumstances the art confused me. As Iwandered through the crowd, attempting actuallyto see the art, questions kept emerging and recur¬ring. What do these photographs of naked womenbody builders imply about this male artist's, RobertMapplethorpe's, attitude towards women? Whatabout those spread legs on that Ed Paschke paint¬ing, “Brothel Scene from Turds in Hell"? Or — howabout Robert Heinecken s “Lessons in Posing Lin¬gerie" series of photographs and instructions onhow to photograph women in lingerie? Why havethe curators of the show choosen some of theseimages? Does their inclusion in the show automati¬cally make them critiques of a male dominant cul-MISCDorothy E. Smith, Visiting Professor atNorthwestern, will give a lecture,“Objectivity in Social Knowledge; AFeminist Critique." Sponsored byThe Forum for Liberal Learning andthe Women's Union. Thurs Feb 15 4pm. Goodspeed Recital Hall.FILMRaiders of the Lost Ark A certain kindof "niaiserie" for the Jesuit/Demo¬crat in all of us. The premise andplot, parodying the ratty adventureseries of the '30s and '40s, is simpleenough: Indiana Jones (HarrisonFord) is an archaeologist enlisted bythe U.S. government to recover theark of the covenant (the chest con¬taining the 10 Commandments) be¬fore the Nazis secure it for the dia¬bolical machinations of their leader(Hitler). He is assisted by a beauti¬ful, yet inept, heroine (Karen Allen)who serves in turn as hostage or re¬scue material for the bad guys andthe good guy. In the end, after muchchasing and raiding, the villains re¬ceive their just reward and boy andgirl walk away safe and sacrosanct.The comic book-like structures, theheavy handed reification of charac¬ter and situation, and the emphasison quick paced action make Raidersan extremely entertaining film. Butwhile entertainment is perhaps ourmost legitimate impulse for attend¬ing the cinema, it too often encour¬ages us to ignore the ideologies lurk¬ing beneath appearances. A briefdescription of the climactic scene toillustrate the film's underlying pre¬mise: When the heros and villains su-multaneously discover the ark, theformer are subdued and tied upwhile the latter unlock the ark. Afuriously glowing light precedes therelease of screaming sirens from thesacred chest which melt the Nazis'faces, sparing our heros from thisabominable fate. One need notsearch too far for a situation paral¬lel to this cinematic Armageddon,The New Testament or current domi¬nant American attitudes toward alimited" nuclear war seem likewiseinformed by the ideology which saysthat with the formidable hand ofGod and the free hand of the marketon our side we, the chosen people,are bound to be the heros. This filmwas made in 1981, and directed bySteven Spielberg. Ideas formulatedby Kasdan, Lucas, Kaufman, and theAmerican Dream. Friday, Feb 11 at 7& 9:30 in Mandell Hall and Sat. Feb12 at 2:30 in Quantrell Hall.Doc/L.S.F. $2. —RM.Man of Iron (Andrei Wajda, 1981) To¬morrow at 7:15 and 9:30. Doc. $2.Palm Beach Story (Preston Sturges,1942) A classic screwball comedyfull of strange characters and onewoman who knows what she wants.Claudette Colbert leaves her hus¬band when he can't provide for herto find a man who will. Sat Feb 12 at7:15 and 9 p.m. $2. LSF. — KKWomen in Arms (Victoria Schultz,1980) Thirty percent of the forceswhich brought down the Somoza dic¬tatorship in 1979 were women.Today, as Nicaragua faces attacksby Somocista ex-National Guards¬men, women still comprise an impor¬tant part of the Sandinista army.Women in Arms analyzes the role ofwomen in the Nicaraguan army, andin the Nicaraguan revolutionaryprocess. In candid interviews,women talk about the different rea¬sons why they joined the revolution.Interviews with certain male lead¬ ers also illustrate the problem ofmachismo which women continue toface. An important theme is theirstruggle against this machismo. SunFeb 13 at 7:30. East Lounge, 2nd fir,Ida Noyes Hall. — JCHeat of Glass (Werner Herzog, 1976)No, it's not a Blondie concert film,but drugs are just as appropriate.Heart o' Glass is Werner Herzog'sapocalyptic vision of a time onecharacter describes as "the begin¬ning of the end.” What follows is afilm which never ceases to visuallyamaze, just as it never ceases to in¬tellectually challenge. Ostensibly,Heart of Glass is merely a porten-tuous tale of a town which loses thesecret to the production of its singu¬lar ruby glass. In Herzog s hancs,this simple tale becomes one of uni¬versal implications and mysticbeauty. Heart of Glass demands thewilling imagination of the viewer; itis a film which takes place in themind of the viewer just as much as ittakes place upon the screen. See itand, in the words of Doc, be “cere¬bral.” Sun Feb 13 at 8:00. Doc. $2. —BKARTArt of the Avant-Garde m Russia: Selec¬tions from the George CostaKis Col¬lection. The sheer size of this exhibitis both its weakness and itsstrength. The vast display of works,produced between approximately1910 and 1930, can confuse and in¬timidate, as well as exhaust. But thesize also communicates an importantpoint about the art produced duringthis relatively short period — therewas a large degree of productivity,a variety of styles, and a swiftnessof style changes within what iscalled here simply 'avant garde' art.Many different ways of thinkingand creating are represented here;but what emerges as commonthemes are precisely these issues — ‘thinking' and ‘creating.'The 35 artists in this show were allsupporters of both art' and Revolu¬tion. As intellectual revolutionariesbalancing on the edge of the old andthe new (their work had its greatestvisibility / impact ca. 1 91 3-1 924)they were committed to the destruc¬tion of the old concept of art and theconstruction of the new. The preoccu¬pation with form vs. content issuesthroughout reflects a preoccupationwith a desire to move out of a pastpound by subjectivity and into thefuture — a future with "non-objec-tive" art as an aid in the creation ofsocialist society. From the origins ofthe movement in a Cubist aestheticwith Formalist and Futurist convic¬tions — including the study of the re¬lationship between the object ana itsenvironment, a call for “transration-al language" and "alogical paint¬ing, the rejection of content as such,and the juxtaposition of forms tocreate completely new meanings;through Matiushm and his schooi ofSpatial Realism — their explorationof the effect of physical and psycho¬logical motivation on and in art; tothe development of Suprematismpar excellence — the clear articula¬tion of forms and colors (form vs.form now, rather than form vs. con¬tent); to the Constructivist emphasison examination and definition — ofthe relation between materials usedand product completed, of a scientif¬ic art based on and perpetuatingtechnology through economy of ex¬pression; to its extreme expressionin Productivism, an explicitly utili¬tarian view of art — there isthroughout an emphasis on self-con¬scious analysis, and a concern aboutthe meaning in the physical presenceof the work.As I said: confusing; but powerful.The very forcefulness of what actu¬ally represented a small number ofartists working in Russia at the timewas perhaps a contribution to theirdownfall. Modernism did not end;but this particular “formalist" ver¬sion of it was banned from the Sovi¬et Union as being too elitist, too ab¬stract to understand (see, theconfusion is not yours alone), eventu¬ally, too “bourgeois" — in sum, toocritic-al and unclearly dogmatic forthose who set the ideological arenafor and propagated the work of So¬cialist Realism. Through 13 March atthe Museum of Contemporary Art,237 E Ontario. Tue-Sat, 10-5: Sun,noon-5. 280-2660 $2 except Tues¬days; free. — NMSuellen Rocca “I know your name. Iknow their name. It’s the same name. It's the same. I know theirname...,” “Your Names The Same."Her name is Suellen Rocca. Her art.now showing in the PhyMis Kind gal¬lery, is Imagist. In "I Know YourName." cars wind their way throughhair tufts on a half-shorn head. Notethey are cars, not ropes, rabbits orrevolvers; favorite shapes of hers.The cars make their way around thehair shaft rather than through thehead — not dripping brain juice. It isonly half warped. The faceless headin 1979 ' Pictures Don t Lie is Suel-len7 The head is composed of strandsof rope, which are the fiber of manyof her compositions: they're nice for¬mally because their casual lines pro¬vide her with the fluid representa¬tion she seeks and remind us of foldsof gut. human tissue, strangulationetc. Her iconography derives fromthe comic book and the wicked fairytale. Its wacky perversity might bedeadly cynical and psychotic if wewere more serious about her shapesthan she is. In the "Tale Of The Two-Legged Bunny," the rabbit ap¬proaches a bag of garbage whilewolves, knives, cars, birds, worms,guns, nails and poison look on. "Nea¬test Garbage is similar but oozedrips from the bag and from books."Nice Doggies" is a striking piece incolored pencil, the teeth of a quadru¬ple jawed wolf flash like symmetri¬cal lightening bolts. The surfaceflows from jaw to jaw. Suellen is in¬terested in strata Her surfaces rip¬ple and flow, rarely static. Shapeshang suspended in dimensionlessspace, rarely solid. Outlines threa¬ten to unravel, rarely straight.Rarely something Through 18 Febat the Phyllis Kind Gallery, 226 E.Ontario. Tue-Sat, 10-5. 642-6302.Free —SSDANCEAmerican Ballet Theatre Some day wemay have things like NYC has. If youlike ballet and Chicago, you wait;you make it a point to give COB allthe support and attention it needs inits growing stages. And then you goto see the NY companies wheneverthey're in town (usually we re luckyif it's two visits/yr/co), sigh, and arereminded how far we have to go.And if the performance fails to en¬rapture, we gloat: NYC isn't perfect;when we become perfect, at leastwe'll be perfect. Or, if NYC isn't per¬fect, maybe were o.k. Notwith¬standing any neuroses, ABT andBaryshnikov are at the Auditoriumtill the 19th, scheduled to do some new (as in Chicago-premiere), andpotentially quite interesting works.Things like: Twyla Tharp s “PushComes to Shove." (Sat matinee. Wedpm); Balanchine/Stravinsky' s“Apollo" (Wed matinee); Taylor-Cor-bett's "Great Galloping Gottschaik"(also Wed matinee); an unidentifiedbut curious-sounding Follow theFeet" (Mon and Thurs pm); and whatstrikes my fancy, "Duets." by MerceCunningham, music by John Cage ( Fripm). Get tickets now, or soon. At theAuditorium Theatre, 70 E. CongressPkwy, this Fri-Sat and Mon-Thurs at8 pm. with 2 pm matinees on Sat andWed. The box office, 922-2210: Tele¬charge. 977-1705. — BM.MUSICBaritone Bruce Tammen will give aconcert of music by Grieg. Faure.Schumann, Poulenc, Liszt, and SatieHe will be assisted by pianist KitBridges. Fri Feb 11 at 8 pm in Good-speed Recital Hall. FreePiano Capers Jazz pianists Willie andBethany Pickens will play jazz, showtunes, and contemporary music. SatFeb 12 at 8 pm. Tickets $6 HydePark Union Church, 5600 S Wood-lawn. 363-6063.The Kuijken Trio will be featurea onthe second concert of the UC EarlyMusic Series. Over the past 15 yearsthe three have established them¬selves as outstanding performers ofBaroque music. Barthold Kuijken,baroue flute; Wieland Kuijken, violada gamba: and Robert Kohnen,harpsichord, will perform works byTelemann. Marais, Bach. Abel, Le-clair, and Rameau. Tickets are $9(UC students S5). at the Reynold'sClub Box Office and the Departmentof Music Concert Office (GoH 310)Sat Feb 12 at 8 pm in Mandel Hall.Chicago Chamber Orchestra DirectorDieter Kober will conduct a programfeaturing Chicago composer AdaBelle Markus, pianist, in a perfor¬mance of her composition "Tec-tures". Sun Feb 13 at 3:30 pm. MainAuditorium of the Museum of Scienceand Industry. FreeChicago Ensemble Gerald Rizzer,piano; Laurence Shapiro, violin; Mi¬chael Masters, cello; Susan Levitin,flute, and Doris Kirschner, sopranoperform Haydn's Trio No. 1 in FMajor for Flute, Cello, and Piano;Villa-Lobos' Suite for Flute andPiano; Handel s German Arias; andRavel's Trio in A Minor for Violin,Cello, and Piano. Mon Feb 14 at 8pm. Tickets $5. International House,1414 E 59th St. 271-3810Grey City Journal 2/11/83Staff: John And.ew, Abigail Asher, Nina Berman, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon, John Conlon, Steven Diamond, Keith Fleming, Steve Haydon, SarahHerndon, Michael Honigsberg, Richard Kaye, Kathy Kelly, LorraineKenny, Bruce King, Madeleine Levin, Shawn Magee, Marla Martin, Richard Martin, Vince Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Movie, Pat O'Connell, PaulO'Donnell, Maddy Paxman, Sharon Peshkin, John Probes, Abby Scher,Rachel Shtier, Cassandra Smithies, Beth Sutter.Fiction and Poetry Coordinator: Judith Silverstein.Editorial Board: Stephanie Bacon, Leah Mayes, Ken Wissoker.Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Beth Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—3Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses72 How Much Are Your Lenses93 How Much Are Your Lenses94 How Much Are Your Lenses9What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1 Is the doctor really a contact lense specialist9(or is he an eyeglass salesman ?)2 Can I expect professional service and care9(or will I be handled by inept, non-professional salespeople?)3 Are the quality of lenses the best available9(or are they off-brands and seconds4 The question is. not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest priceWe at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above crite¬ria of CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY AND PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALUES!SUPER-WET BAUSCH & LOMBFLEXIBLE SOFLENSONLY $29.00 B3, B\ & F SERIESSuper-thin highly wet- only$33.75table lens specifically Basic series of lensesdesigned to correct that Bausch & Lombthose patients who built their reputationwere previous hard oncontact lens failures Sticks & StuffCOLLECTIBLES • ANTIQUES • USED FURNITURE •CLOCKS • LAMPS • ALL WOOL INDIAN RUGSAND A VARIETY OF KNICK-KNACKS ATREASONABLE PRICES1749 E. 55th St. Hours: 667-4610Tues-Fri Noon - 7 pmSat & Sun 10 am - 5 pmOr. 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I D.The University of Chicago BookstoreOffice Machines & Photographic Dept.970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor962-7558 • 5-4364 (ON CAMPUS)4—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALHUmmThe following account of the problems ofhealth, literacy, and development in thevillage of Kavutalam was written afterthe author’s first trip to India in 1981. Thefive months she spent living in India beganwith a visit to this village, where the pho¬tographs were taken.by Maddy Paxman“Kavutalam, Adoni T.Q. Kurnool Dis¬trict, Andra Pradesh.” These are the co-or¬dinates which neatly pinpoint this smallsouth Indian village, conferring on it an airof systematization and modernity whichmelt away on first sight of the cluster ofmud and straw houses in the midst offields, accessible only by a 30 mile bus ridealong bumpy roads. For any Western trav¬eller, the first visit to India is something ofa trip back in time, but never more so thanin the villages — those half forgottencorners of rural habitation which pepperthe sub-continent, the peasants workingthe land they possess with much the samemethods and implements as they havealways used and with much the samemeager yield. Every now and then a gov¬ernment irrigation project, or a severedrought, come to sway the fortunes of theharvest and the villagers prosper orstarve accordingly; but one could be forgi¬ven for thinking that no government or im¬perial influence, be it Moghul, British or In¬dian, has never caused more than a ripplein the age-old traditions of rural exis¬tence.Kavutalam is lucky. It comes under thearea of the Tungabadra river irrigationscheme so its harvests of groundnuts, clus-terbeans, maize and lentils are now moresecure. It is quite a large, indeed sprawl¬ing village, and forms a nucleus for thesurrounding smaller habitations. It hasseveral schools, with teaching available inboth Telugu and Kanada (the two local lan¬guages: one official, one traditionally inuse), which are ostensibly up to college en¬trance standard, though the quality of in¬struction is poor.Yet despite this relative agriculturalsuccess the child mortality rate is still25%, mostly as a result of malnutritionand diseases such as measles and T.B.which are fatally aggravated by under¬nourishment. Although undoubtedly thelack of fresh fruit, vegetables and milk,and other such commodities contribute tothis situation, it can also be attributed to alack of knowledge of basic nutrition. Also,since a child is a non-productive member ofthe community people are even less willingthan usual to pay for expensive medicines(when they are available), and more oftenthan not religious superstitions take overthe role of medical care. It is the godess ofsmallpox — now relegated to measles,since the World Health Organization eradi¬cated her special domain of influence —who chooses whether a child lives or dies.Three years ago, after many years ofmissionary work in India, Robin Sleigh be¬came manager of a Rural DevelopmentProject in Kavutalam under the auspicesof the Church of South India, with addition¬al funding from western charities. Kavuta¬lam had previously been the location of afully staffed mission hospital, but this wasclosed and a rural health project set up inits stead. The former hospital compoundnow houses local trained health and educa¬tional workers. One should understandthat hospitals in rural areas are a luxuryfor the few who can afford them, so, on thewhole, the ordinary villagers benefit morefrom a programme of basic health educa¬tion and mother and child care. However,the project would benefit greatly fromsome proper in-patient facilities and theservices of a fully qualified doctor — thenearest being in Adoni 30 miles awayThe stated aim of the project is to in¬crease the self-confidence of the villagersand help them to become more self-reliant.India’s poor, crushed for centuries at thebottom of the heap, and more or less impri¬soned by the still rigid caste system, havereached a state of almost total inertia. Notonly do they shrink from the richer andmore influential castes, (in Kavutalam, theReddi caste, owners of the surroundingland and the chief employers of the vil¬lage), but they have a tendency to regard any attempts at improving their lot as asystem of hand-outs which must begrasped at, rather than a step towards de¬velopment in which they can and must playan important role. For the project workersthis means many frustrations: a recentbuilding project was almost ruined bycareless handling of the bricks bought forthe purpose.Western medical technique must be in¬troduced subtly as a complement to thebettering of health standards in general.Otherwise they come to be seen as a formof magic; and should the magic fail, so dopeople's confidence in it. The idea of a sus¬tained “course of treatment” such as isneeded with antibiotics, is therefore oneof the hardest to put over, quite apartfrom the prohibitive expense involved.At present the project is divided intotwo schemes, one dealing with health andone with education. The latter, besidesrunning night-schools in several villages,introducing some new agricultural meth¬ods, and trying to improve on the presentvery low rate of literacy (about 3%), triesto help villagers deal with the tortuous in¬tricacies of Indian bureaucracy. Someproblems, however, are almost insoluble.The few villagers in Kavutalam eligiblefor a government pension must provide aphotograph and a doctor’s certificate —both virtually unobtainable outside thetowns. There are now project organizers inmost of the villages; these are volunteerswho help bring to light local cases of illnessand other special problems among thepoorer villagers and keep the projectworkers informed.The health project is more or less limitedby funds to caring for mothers and chil¬dren, and since it began there has un¬doubtedly been a marked improvement inthe health of children in the area. Mothers are given a “Road to Health” chart andare encouraged to bring their childrenalong to regular visiting clinics, held in thevillage, where they are weighed and theirprogress is monitored. Needless to say,the majority fall far short of the norm.The clinics, or camps as they are called,have become something of a social event.Hordes of children cluster around the jeep,at first shy, but becoming quickly bolderand showing great interest in the proceed¬ings. The villagers have begun to have re¬spect for the health workers, and presentthemselves regularly with their symp¬toms, which they class generally as either‘sickly’ or ’spotty'. There is at present awoman living on the compound who wasfound with her small baby on the steps ofthe temple, where she had gone to die ofT.B. The support of this woman and her de¬pendent mother has proven a drain on theproject’s woefully inadequate resources,and it is unlikely that other such cases willreceive the same succour.Any sense of village unity is somewhatundermined by the less than peaceful co¬existence in Kavutalam of several dif¬ferent religious groups. A large Moslemcommunity in one part of the village holdsits own uneasily against the followers ofNagama, the Hindu snake goddess and hercolleagues. In neighboring villages therehas even been bloodshed. There is also asmall community of Christians. RobinSleigh is a committed Christian and the work of the project is strongly based on alife of prayer and fellowship. But in hiswork there is none of the missionary zealwhich, in the past, has sought to link con¬version to Christianity with progress in theminds of those they help. He sees the mis¬sionary role as bearing witness to his faithby his work, whilst encouraging the faithof others insofar as it already exists in thearea. The anecdote is related with relish ofthe old man who stood up at a local churchmeeting and complained “I've been aChristian for 60 years and I still haven’thad my roof mended”.The future is uncertain. Measurable re¬sults are few and may seem trivial in theface of the enormous barriers to be over¬come before the quality of life of India'spoor becomes even bearable by our stan¬dards. And it is arguable how long theslow influence of external aid can continuebefore the incentive to change gives wayto permanent dissatisfaction with one'slot. But if fewer children die of avoidablediseases, if people learn how to exploittheir resources to the full — in short, ifsome poor people are given a betterchance to claim what is their right in life,health and dignity, then the project can besaid to be succeeding.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—5by Susan S^ubakIn the spring of 1965, the University ofChicago theater department staged So¬phocles’ Antigone paired with Jean An¬ouilh’s version of the Theban tragedy.Now eighteen years later, Chicago CityTheatre presents Anouilh’s Antigone whilewe are awaiting the opening of the Sopho¬cles play at Court Theater next week.Jean Anouilh's adaptation, first per¬formed in Nazi-occupied Paris in 1943. fol¬lows the classical play carefully in plot andcharacter. Antigone, the niece of Creon.king of Thebes, buries her brother Potyn-iees, despite the king's pronouncementthat anyone touching the rebel’s bodywould meet certain death. The omniscientGreek chorus sides with Antigone in herloyalty to the Gods and kin rather than toGreon’s demands. In the end, Haemon. An¬tigone’s intended husband and Creon sson, and Eurydice, Haemon’s mother andCreon’s wife, choose death as welt.Anouilh’s play, however, does departfrom the classic. Antigone divests thedrama of its theistic elements when sheconcedes that she doesn’t really believethat the burial ritual is necessary to freeher brother’s body for the afterlife. It is“religious dribble,” and she too has wit¬nessed the corruption of the priests. Herdenial of religious motivations both uni¬versalizes her dilemma and makes it apersonal issue, for now she is not instruct¬ed by tradition as much as by internal dic¬tates. She admits, also, that her actionwas not prompted by any particular close¬ness she shared with her brother, who wassomething of a blackguard and vagabond.The clearest expresion of Anouilh's ideasis articulated by Chorus, who views Anti¬gone's impulsiveness as the workings ofFOUR RECORDSPlaying Possum, Maureen Tucker {TrashRecords)There are six great tracks on the finalvolume of The Complete Buddy Holly boxset, though they were never intended forpublic consumption. Months before hisdeath, at his New York apartment, Buddyrecorded these demos for his producer,Norman Petty. They’re the products of sin¬gle takes, hatting and unsynchronized forlack of studio polish. It is their undistilled,ragged quality that makes these recordin¬gs so special. Here, in an intimate and be¬lievable setting, is the sound of a talentedand prolific tunesmith struggling to pursuehis craft in a new, inventive way.Maureen Tucker has duplicated this set¬ting on her debut LP, Playing Possum. It isspare sounding — homemade and self-produced — and technically rugged. Sheplays all of the instruments herself, somewith a minimum of proficiency. The mix isheavily percussive (her first career was asa drummer for the Velvet Underground).Her vocalizing is distinctly non-musical, al¬most childlike. These components, infusedwith Maureen’s elusive notions about per¬forming, combine to make an idiosyncraticproduction that can be exciting to listento.Chiefly, she reinterprets r’n’r oldies,stripping them down to just barely recog¬nizable chords while asssembling vapor-o us, ' * littte-i n st r u me nt” arr an gem e nt saround them. This is not done in a mockingway — she is simply tailoring the melodiesin a way that suits her playing style. Shecovers “Bo Diddley” and “Slippin’ and Sli- din’ ’’ (just like Buddy!), and resurrects LouReed's “Heroin.” Best of alt is a barely-held-together version of Dylan's “I’ll BeYour Baby Tonight.” For contrast, thereare two instrumentals, showcasing her ac¬complished. classical playing style.The most enduring quality about thisalbum is its inspiration. Aside from itsyouth orientation, rock's most originalpremise is its pluralism — the idea thatanyone can play along. Maureen ap¬parently believes in the sufficiency of afew musical skills to express mature me¬lodic ideas; this record ts a cheerful demon¬stration of how far this idea can be taken.Those who admire “honesty” in music willfind a truckload of it here. It will move youto think about music, and perhaps even totry your own hand at it.Milo Goes To College, The Descendants(New Alliance)The Descendants, from San Pedro, CA,present a durable, cheery punk productthat would be “Hot Hits” material in afairer universe. They debuted with a ge¬nius. oddball EP (Fat) in 1981, and pro¬duced a couple of nifty tracks for compila¬tion LPs last year. On these records, theyestablished a signature sound — a ringing,overwound buzz — and cultivated aunique, teenage humor that separatedthem from the political hardcore pack. Onthis, their first album, the speed rockstance has been toned down, while thelyrical focus has shifted from fast-food andbass fishing to “g-i-r-l-s.” Despite theironed-out sound, the performances arestill “punk” (in the traditional sense ofhaving limited ambitions) and the humor »sstill smart-ass. Afficianados of clean¬nosed, punk romantics like the Buzzcocks should enjoy this. My favorite songs arethe ones about being a bear, not being apunk, fishing in Catalina, and visiting theStatue of Liberty.Bullshit Detector Two (Crass); Not So QuietOn The Western Front (Alternative Tent¬acles)Each of these double-disk compilationsbespeaks a commitment to anarchist poli¬tics and to amateur rock-and-roll. Not SoQuiet. . . was assembled by Dead Kenne¬dies’ Jetlo Biafra, from tapes originallyfeatured on the ’’Maximum Rock’n’Roll”radio show; Bullshit Detector Two wascreated by the British punk band, Crass.Each of these records features as manynew and politically-relevant bands ascould feasibly be crammed onto vinyl-—about one-hundred bands between them!Both albums are graced with copious linernotes, and both are reasonably-priced inbetter record stores ($6 to $7). Each recordis anchored in its own, peculiar, native (USor UK) punk, although each also veers intofurtive, non-punk experimentation, espe¬cially the Crass record. The apparent em¬phasis is on presenting unvarnished per¬formances, so as might be expected theproduction on these records is subpar; forme, that makes the listening all the morevisceral, which is sort of the point. . . Eachrecord also bags several worthwhiledebuts—Angst, Ribsy, and Bent Nails onthe U.S. record; No Label, Metro Youth,Passion Killers, and Amerikan Arsenal onthe U.K. record. Meanwhile, the averagesongs are at least interesting. In short,these records have a lot of integrity, and iffor no other reason they should be heard(and bought—that’s the name of the game,after all.) —Paul Mollica8—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL- ' -'2T .— — her intrinsic power. “Tragedy — a turn ofa spring will unwind it. Tragedy is clean. Itis firm. It is flawless.” When forced to re¬flect on her choice Antigone is confusedabout the meaning of death, not her owndecision to die. But in Anouilh’s world An¬tigone, although eager for life, is not a vic¬tim. “When in tragedy — shout.” saysChorus. Tragedy becomes not despair butpower.It is Creon who appears less powerful atfirst because he is ashamed of his own com¬promising nature. He self-consciously tellshis niece that “life is only the happinessyou can get out of it." and “ 'no' is a man¬made word.” To this Antigone replies thathe would make a great king in a world ofanimals but she wants “life complete ornot at all.” And there we have the polemicquite neatly — hedonism versus purism,impersonal persecution versus personalresolution, expedience versus steadfast¬ness. The indictment against Creon in An¬ouilh’s play is too neat, but the ChicagoCity players have lessened the btatancy ofthe dichotomy by weakening the positionof both sides. Departing from the originalplay, in this performance Antigone has anote scrawled that reads, “I don’t knowwhy I am dying.” And Creon, when con¬fronted with the death of his wife and son,openly mourns on stage — whereas in theoriginal drama. Chorus merely describeshis grief. Curiously, the play presentlyperformed in Chicago is more sympatheticto Creon, the symbol of authority, thanwas the play that was performed in 1943with the permission of the Nazi censors.Of course one wants to cheer Antigonealong, but Anouilh makes this difficultsometimes with his idealization of youth,and his contention that any life, even ifyoung and determined, could be clean andflawless. After all, Antigone, beinghuman, must have compromised at somepoint in her life. And Anouilh's attention toAntigone’s sexual innocence does not jus¬tify her life as flawless; Antigone's re¬solve to live a Life free of compromise isimpossible. In the end Antigone and Creonrepresent dilemmas, not decisions, fortheir opposing beliefs do not settle, butrather, spiral. Chicago City Theatre has in¬creased the ambiquity of the tragedy andthus extended its provocative power.Anouilh's play is masterful in its presen¬tation of basic ethical problems, but isweak in its language (which may be due inpart to the translation), and at times usesconventions suited to American familytelevision drama like the Donna Reedshow. One wishes that Antigone wouldspeak her own words rather than gratifythe playwright’s idealized vision of youthLike much dated drama, the young daugh¬ter is the object of the family's prurient in¬terest. When Antigone returns from hertask of burying her brother, she is met byher nurse who suspects that she is return¬ing from a liaison with a lover. In her dis¬appointment the nurse reproaches Anti¬gone;...even you who never used to primpin front of the looking-glass or smearyour mouth with rouge, or dindleand dandle to make the boys ogleyou, and you ogle back.Unfortunately this silly dialogue deterio¬rates further as Antigone reassures hernurse that she is still pure (the necessarycondition, of course, for a martyr-to-be)and consoles her with the following remini¬scence;Do you remember how 1 used to rubyour cheeks to make them shine? Mydear, wrinkled red apple.Fortunately, Anouilh's language doesn'tremain in these trite depths, though it israrely inspired.Anouilh’s words are at their best whenChorus speaks, which is understandablebecause the playwright is stronger onstatements than he is on character repre¬sentations. Fittingly, Michael Myers asChorus gives the most commanding perfor¬mance. The acting of the rest of the cast isadequate to their tasks but generallylacks subtlety. Ehrenburg, playing thepart of Creon, bunched and unbunched hiseyebrows too furtively in his attempts toappear thoughtful. But despite thesefaults, Chicago City has presented a suc¬cessful version of an interesting play.■n 1CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062 llc|ltf PuddingRENT-A-CAR1608 E. 53rd Street$14.50 per dey 200 Free MilesBetween 1C Troeks _ _ _and Cornell Pwf *40vWINTERESTED IN A CAREER INPRIVATE SCHOOL TEACHING?Carolyn Burk of Independent Educational Serviceswill be visiting the campus on Wednesday, February 16to interview students.Education courses, practice teaching and certificationare not necessarily pre-requisites.IES is a non-profit teacher placement organization,funded by dues and fees paid by candidates and, inmost cases, by schools.Contact Will Snyder in Career Counseling/Placement ^for time, location and individual appointments.Hillel PresentsA Lecture On:“The Impact of Jewish Law(Halacha) on Israeli Statutesand Court Decisions”byMrs. Nava Y. Danon(Member of the Israeli &Illinois Bar Association)Friday • February 11 • 8:30 P.M.Hillel Foundation5715 S. Woodlawn Ave. I enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372 ! T)y6e pfrk AmsAirsQM-tery »VALENTINE’S #OPENING • FEB. 12# 12-4 P.M.Come buy beautiful Valentine'sDay Gifts at sensible prices.JEWELRY • DRAWINGSPRINTS • BATIK *6 MORE57th & Wodlawnat the Unitarian ChurchGallery Hours:Thurs. 12-3 • Fri. 12-3Sat. 12-4 • Sun. lo-iBEER SPECIAL OF THE WEEKAUGSBURGER $198Bottles - Cans - Bock Beer JL 6 Pa°kNot icedV A LENTIN E’S I) A Y S F E Cl ALS1From Italycorvo$339REI) OK WHITEReg. 84.98 750 ML GIACOBAZZIWINESBIANCO - ROSE qoLAMBRUSCO ^ 1Reg. 82.99 J- 750 MLFrom GermanyHERMAN J. HERDERLIEBFRAIJMILCH$1 98Reg. 82.89 JL 50 ML CHATEAU LA SALLELIGHTT ABLE WINE$498Reg. 85.98 JL: 1.5 LTRCHATEAU DANIELLEN.Y. STATECHAMPAGNE$098Reg. 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Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Tlmaa, January 1980THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—7MARBLES IN THE MOUTHCampbell McGrath and Keith Fleming werein a real bind. The two students, whoseone-act plays will be on the same bill thenext two weekends, could not find any¬body who knew enough about their highlyobscure plays to write some promotion forthem. The two guys had no choice but toheroically carry the ball themselves, re¬calling the heady days of their youths andrevealing the secrets behind their incipi¬ent dramatic success in a mutual self-inter¬view. The plays — “The Autobiography ofEdvard Munch” and “Reading in theDark” — can be seen as a Concrete GothicTheater production February 18, 19, 25,and 26, at 8PM in the Reynolds Club first-floor theater.KF: Remember how much trouble we hadsatisfying Court Studio? They insisted onhaving a one-sentence description thatsummed up the entire play. They thought itwas easy — “Hamlet. . .a play aboutguilt.”CM: If you gotta give my play a theme. ..“Survival of the fittest” — no, thatsounds wrong: “How the mighty have fall¬en.”KF: Reading in the Dark is about secretsand skeletons.CM: I said mine is a minor tragedy, which Istill stick to. The Autobiography of EdvardMunch is a minor tragedy.KF: My play is about how sometimeswomen are cruel to us in love simply be¬cause they are embarrassed to be nor¬mal.CM: This play is about how the mightyhave fallen.KF: Well, my play is about, uh, how flood¬ing a loft and trying to sleep underwater is a good way of sustaining the audience’sinterest.CM: My play is about “Speed Racer”, spe¬cifically Racer X. And also about, uh, a lotof beer drinking.KF: My play is about two lovers who are soinsanely large within themselves that theythink they have no need whatever of otherpeople.CM: My play. . .features Edvard Munchtalking to a bust of Elvis Presley.KF: My play. . .uh, it's about how impo¬tence is sometimes just a guy’s curiosityabout other modes of being.CM: My play has a character who is haunt¬ed by a Little Solipsistic Man who lives inhis mind and won’t let him sleep.KF: My play's about how if a girl doesn’tshave her legs she's gonna have a lot ofstories to tell you.CM: Now I’m going to tell you aboutKeith’s play. . .KF: One sentence now, let’s keep it theway Court Studio likes it.CM: It’s about bird-watching and spittingup marbles.KF: All right. Campbell’s play is about peo¬ple cornin’ in from out of town, and uh,being irresponsible drivers.CM: Is your play set in Chicago?KF: Uh. . .CM: Specifically, at all?KF: It must be set somewhere. . .The girl inthe play keeps forgetting what town she'sin. It’s probably pretty obviously Ameri¬can College. Is yours American College?CM: Mine's pretty much. . .American youth,I guess.KF: Edvard Munch never did go to college,did he? CM: None of them are going to college.KF: My characters never mention college.It’s not a good dramatic vehicle.CM: My play was originally not set any¬where. It was in, like, a mythical kind ofpseudo-Norway. Five people sitting in theliving-room drinking beer, watching TV,based on. . .my friends or something.KF: Did you have any urge to start yourplay out with a bang?CM: No. My play doesn't start out with abang at all. A guy is just sitting on thecouch watching a football game. And theyjust move around the room and kind ofmake fun of the TV and kind of get on eachother a little bit, joke around, the room ispretty much in a shambles and it’s kind ofstupid, and dumb, and all they ever do iswatch TV. . .but it's kind of funny. Thefourth scene kind of returns to that theme.There’s Edvard Munch alone in the loft,painting. It opens into this long mono¬logue, right? He talks about Speed Racer.That’s the only dramatic part of the play.KF: I remember once this woman play¬wright told me — “You give an actor ascript and the first thing he wants to knowis — what do I want? Every minute onstage the actor wants to know, What do IWANT?” And I, like, it got me thinking ofthis whole electrified world where every¬one has these desperate needs. . .thiswoman really got me thinking about Ten-ne^ee Williams. So, what kind of steamdoe^your play run on? What do your char¬acters WANT, Campbell?CM: To drink beer and watch “The Jeffer-sons” without anybody bothering them.KF: But did you have any problem withsustaining interest?CM: Well, I really started writing the playentirely accidentally. It just started out asa long monologue by some guy about themeaning of life, which he found in SpeedRacer. KF: My characters think of the city theyhappen to have a bedroom in as being, Idon’t know, this psychiatric ward they’veforgotten the name of. Somebody told methat watching this play is like hiding in thecloset of this ‘couple-on-the-rocks’ bed¬room and listening to their bad sex andmean stories.CM: My play, like I said, was originally setin this pseudo-mythical-Norway. The char¬acters went down to the beach to look atthe giant windmills. . .these giant super¬natural windmills. But I thought — “This isstupid.” At the same time, these guyswere supposed to be watching football. Itwas supposed to be this odd unexplainedcircumstance, but I finally realized thatthat was stupid, so I set it in Chicago. Mynext play is called “The Mysterians”. It’sbased on a Japanese horror-movie. I meana monster movie. Whatever.KF: I think Robert Bly really has mynumber. I was drunk and reading his book,News of the Universe, the other night andhe said that writers have pretty much ex¬hausted subjects that are just abouthuman-beings. He says it’s time for peoplein the West to start, like, giving snow andanimals a higher IQ again. Otherwise awriter has to keep having breakdownsand having these perverse characters togive him the feeling he’s original. I neverwould have written this play about a girlwho never sleeps if I’d thought of, like, anintelligent tree, who’s saying things like:“Wow, where’d my leaves go?”Melissa: How about ‘justice and injustice ?KF: What?Melissa: ‘Justice and injustice’.CM: That's very meaningful, Melissa.KF: That really sums it all up, I guess. ‘Jus¬tice and injustice’.Melissa: Thank you.CM: Yeah. Wonderful. Absolutely. . .great.Yeah.. O3$O* ■<$ o8$& singers, groups,dance, performance,mimes, comics, etc.selected single acts will receive *200,groups will receive *400AUDITION DATE: FEB. 14CALL SAO 753-35928—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALr hm MemberAmerican Oprometnc AssociationDR. M.R. MASLOV• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• All TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUK ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100 J T'" " ——marian realty,Inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400for festive eating and drinkingEnjoy....fresh crepes, quiches, sandwichesunusually good salads andtempting dessert crepes...Join us early tor hearty breaktast specials.... and Hyde Park s best ice cream sundaes,full drink menu affordably pricedOur Chili is the best...we wonChicago s Great Chili Cook-Off1 overallNovember 1, 198053^ St. & %^)667-2000 LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustono Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlown Ave.suN0AY 8:30 o.m. — Sermon 6 Eucharist9:30 o.m. — Sunday School 8 Adult Forum:“L uther’’10:45 o.m. — Sermon 8 Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person)Put the pastin yourfuture!Thoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural setting foraffordable elegance with dramatic view's.—All new kitchens and appliances —Community room-Wall-to-wall carpeting — Resident manager— Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry facilities onparking each floorStudios. One. Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One bedroom from S4*o — Two Bedroom from S660Rent includes heat, cooking gas. and master TV antenna.Call for information arid appointment — 643 14061642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromTire Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex. IncConcrete GothicTheaterpresentsFEB. 4, 5, 7 7 & 728 PMREYNOLDS CLUBFunded by SGFC $3.00 GENERAL$2.50w/STUDENTIDTICKETS AT THE DOOR Used desks,chairs, files,and sofasBRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8.30-5Sat 9-2The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983—15Local Politics4th WardContinued from page oneShe called for responsible police offi¬cials. She also attacked Byrne or eliminat¬ing programs which deal with specialgroups and their efforts to reduce crime.Preckwinkle also pledged to work with thecommunity to develop crime reductiongoals. Fahara said that the most effectiveway to combat crime is to work with parentsto keep their children from becoming crimi¬nals. He said that the school system is in¬strumental in fighting crime. Evans saidthat tax dollars should be returned to com¬munities to help the area’s fight on crime.He denied Preckwinkle’s accusations thatspecial programs had been discontinued. Healso stressed the need for recreational facil¬ities which can act as a diversion for youths.Jones said that Police Superintendent Rich¬ard Brzeczek should be fired. She accusedthe majority of Chicago’s police of being“rude," and said that their character flawsneed to be corrected. Jones believes thatonce this happens citizens will work with thepolice force to effectively reduce crime.Booker said that the ward must be “organ¬ized and educated" to combat crime. Terrysaid that the community must work with thepolice and that any officer drinking or smok¬ing marijuana while on duty should be dis¬missed from the force. Terry also accusedthe police of being slow in answering citi¬zens’ complaints and he stressed that com¬munity involvement will help reduce crime.Smith stated that a key part of crime pre¬vention is to eliminate conditions which hesaid allow the existence of crime. He alsoemphasized that the police must cooperatewith community leaders to fight crime, andhe promised to work for proper use of thepolice department’s Office of ProfessionalStandards.Addressing the issue of economic develop¬ment of the 4th Ward, Preckwinkle said thatan economic development program shouldhave as its core a housing rehabilitation pro¬gram. She said that if the housing in theward is of quality stock, rehabilitationwould increase its worth. She also stressedthe need for business development along47th St. and for the addition of light industryto the ward. Jones attacked Preckwinkle forproviding jobs for certain people only. Fa¬hara said that the business communityshould work to promote employment andthat businesses are needed on 39th, 43rd,and 53rd streets, as well on 47th St. Evanssaid that cooperation with county, state, andfederal governing agencies is needed, andhe promised to work closely with Washing¬ton if he is elected mayor. Smith attackedSeniors!Looking ForA Career?Register with theCareer PlacementRegistryThe National ComputerizedEmployment SearchingServiceYour qualifications will beinstantly available to over8000 employers Totalcost $8 No other feescharged. Over 5000seniors already registeredIt costs nothing to find outmore about CPR. Justcomplete and return thecouponFor Faster Action CallToll-Free 1-800-368-3093In Virginia (703) 683-1085rXn Ctr—r Pl»c**n»nt Registry, Inc^ 11 > » 302 Swann AvanuaAlexandria, Virginia 22301NameAddressC'tyState 2 ip16—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February Evans for not previously supplying jobs tothe 4th Ward. Smith promised to work withcommunity developers to bring jobs to theward, and he vowed to see that jobs result¬ing from the 1992 Chicago World’s Fairwould go to Ward residents. Terry said thathe would look for the Ward’s unemployedand then try to create community spirit tocare for them.Each candidate also addressed the rede¬velopment of shopping facilities in the 4thWard and the use of enterprise zones to spureconomic development. Evans points to hisrecord of initiating economic developmentprograms along 53rd St. He also promised towork on the revitalization of 47th, 43rd, and39th streets, and Lake Park Ave. He saidthat these revitalizations will help to pro¬vide jobs for all. He also said he favors cer¬tain uses of enterprise zones. Jones attackedEvans for not looking after the economic in¬terests of all and she questioned the exclu¬sive use of economic development for neigh¬borhoods south of 47th St. Smith alsoattacked Evans, saying that economic de¬velopment had been stymied during Evans’years as alderman. He also criticized theconcept of enterprise zones, saying that theywere really a “codeword” for “wiping out’’the good done by urban renewal. Faharaalso said that enterprise zones were a“catchword" for the present and that com¬munities must look beyond them to spur eco¬nomic redevelopment. Terry also expressedsome opposition to enterprise zones, sayingthat such programs might not involve com¬munity members in helping economic devel¬opment. He also expressed fears that suchprograms might move poor residents out oftheir homes and bring in rich residents todisplace them. Preckwinkle placed someblame on Byrne’s “complete lack of long-range planning" in planning the city’s eco¬nomic future,” for the Ward’s economic de¬velopment problems. She also attacked Byrne and Evans for allowing the transferof funds out of community development rev¬enues. Perkins, saying that he was the onlybusinessman among the candidates, praisedthe concept of enterprise zones, saying thattheir proper use on the municipal levelwould boost the city’s economy. Booker de¬clined comment on the use of enterprisezones, and said the use of block grantsshould be analyzed.On the question of housing for lower andmiddle income families, Booker urged wardresidents to “organize and participate” tobring better housing facilities to the ward.She also said that “housing has been one ofthe main issues with different organizationsI’ve worked with." Evans said that presenthousing stock should be rehabilitated with¬out removing present residents. He also saidthat steps should be taken to provide for aneconomic mix in housing areas, and he saidthat tax breaks should be given for rehabili¬tating those residences. Fahara said thathousing is always a major issue since agreat deal of displacement takes place inthe ward. He said that housing concerns ofthe 4th Ward require the attention of a full¬time alderman. Terry said that the housingof the 4th Ward is “very bad and very poor,”and he accused present housing plans of“excluding people.” Jones urged rehabilita¬tion of housing which could be rebuilt. Sheaccused Evans of maintaining a “con¬spiracy with discplacement, especiallynorth of 47th St.” Smith attacked Evans fornot preventing the destruction of housingnorth of 47th St. He noted that the Oaklandneighborhood ranked last in housing devel¬opment loans, and said that the Grand Bou¬levard neighborhood had no city rehabilita¬tion grants from 1978 to 1982. He promised towork with the CHA to help lower incomefamilies attain a higher standard of housing.Preckwinkle accused Evans of having ahousing program whose main goal is the de¬ struction of housing. She stated that rehabi¬litation has been needed for a long time buthas not been developed. She also urged theestablishment of a fair rent commission anda tenants’ bill of rights. Perkins said thathousing in the 4th Ward should be stabilized,since former white residents of the neigh¬borhood are not moving back, so that thereis no need for upheaval in the area’s hous¬ing.Each candidate was asked his opinion of aproposal for an elected school board. Terrystated that he would see who in the commu¬nity is qualified to be elected. Fahara at¬tacked Byrne for “dumping” black schoolboard members for residents from the city’sSouthwest Side, and he supported an electedschool board to eliminate bad appointmentsby the mayor. Evans also attacked themayor for the appointments referred to byFahara, and he expressed support for anelected school board. Booker also supportedan elected school board, as it would allowcommunities to “organize and participate”in public education. Jones attacked Evansfor supporting the appointment of RuthLove as superintendent of schools, and shesupported the concept of an elected schoolboard. Smith said that he was undecided onthe idea of an elected school board, althoughhe would support the concept if voters wouldnot allow the Regular Democratic Organiza¬tion to control it. Preckwinkle also ex¬pressed support for an elected school board,adding that elected members should comefrom district. She attacked Evans for notsupporting citizens’ advisory committees tothe school board, and criticized Byrne forher choice of appointees to the school board.Perkins also supported the concept of anelected school board, saying that many vol¬unteers in 4th Ward schools were qualifiedfor the job, and adding that members shouldbe elected from geographic districts.WashingtonContinued from page one“lies.” Daley has also been critical of themayor’s budget and taxing policies. Byrnesupporters say she has been instrumental incorrecting deficits in the Board of Educa¬tion, the Chicago Transit Authority, and thecity budget.Washington said new city revenues wouldbe needed to balance the city’s budget, cityservices would have to be reduced, or both.He said this would be needed to balance thenext municipal budget, noting that the pres¬ent city budget calls for $95 million in “one¬time revenues.” While supporters of Daleyhave also been critical of the mayor’s bud¬get making process, they favor the reduc¬tion of “waste” in city government, sayingthat Chicago cannot raise taxes after under¬going a $480 million tax hike during theByrne administration. Byrne supporterssay, however, that city taxes have beenraised only $298 million during Byrne’s ad¬ministration, and that this was needed toeliminate past deficits.Washington called on future mayors tohave honesty in their public lives, and toavoid the habits of past mayors who “have used this city in a crass political sense.”Elaborating on this point, Washingtonsaid Chicago has suffered from an inabilityto deal with state and federal governments.He accused Byrne of never having workedwith other city mayors to fight for federalprograms beneficial to cities, and of nothaving worked with US representativessuch as himself and Dan Rostenkowski,chairman of the House Ways and MeansCommittee, to initiate programs beneficialto Chicago. Washington further accusedByrne of having worked with Reagan to thedetriment of cities. Byrne has said, howev¬er, that she has agreed with Reagan on pro¬grams which she felt were right but disa¬greed on “inhumane” programs.As part of his pledge for open municipalgovernment, Washington promised to initi¬ate a municipal freedom of information act.Similar plans have been proposed by Daley,and 5th Ward Aid. Larry Bloom, a Washing¬ton supporter. Washington also vowed to“eliminate the patronage system as weknow it,” by eliminating political aspects ofmunicipal hiring and firing. Byrne has saidthat patronage is part of a non-existentmyth about Chicago, and is irrelevant toChicago today. Daley has agreed to a writ¬ten delcaration of the principles of the Shak-man Decree, eliminating political hiring and firing.Concluding his remarks, Washington pro¬mised an open budgetary process, and apartnership in governing Chicago. He ac¬cused past administrations of being too se¬cretive about the budget-making process,and promised to open up the process. Wash¬ington promised to include all in city gov¬ernment.One questioner asked Washington aboutthe appeal of his campaign. Several weeksago, Walter Jacobson of WBBM-TV Newsaccused Washington of not appealing to allaspects of the community, and instead fo¬cusing his campaign on “liberals of the Lin¬coln Park-Hyde Park vareity.” Washington,though saying he appreciates Jacobson’srole in trying to keep the level of the cam¬paign high, said that the reports are inaccu¬rate.Another questioner asked Washingtonabout improving the quality of education inChicago. Washington said that while the“public schools are in trouble,” the nationmust continue its important role in thecountry’s education. He said public educa¬tion needs “rejuvenation” with “money andcommitment.” Washington also expressedhis support for an elected school board, andurged that public education in Chicago be“decentralized.”5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-02001111, 1983Greenwood, No BS,Tufts lead b-ballracesBy Nick LynnIn women's basketball, Tufts andThree's A Crowd are both contenders forfirst place, as the finals draw nearer. Bothteams have good records and excellent scor¬ing ability. Tufts has an impressive recordof 7-0, and Three’s A Crowd is right behindwith 6-0. Upper Wallace with a record of 5-2and Hale with 4-2 are tailing, but aren’t outof it yet.Basketball StandingsGraduate RedNo BS 9 0Spike’s Gang 5 iBarney’s Meat Market 6 2Sandy’s Slammers 5 2Instigators 4 3HiTops 5 4International House 3 5Coulter House 1 7Law School I 0 1Bovver Boys 0 6Broadview 0 7Graduate WhiteToo Swift 8 0Cliff’s Divers 7 1NELC 8 2Debonairs 6 2Res Ipsa Loquitur 5 3The Curia 4 5South Side Jazz 3 5Malice 2 2 6Feel Lucky Punks? 2 6Confederacy of Dexters 1 7Scutt Boys 0 9Women’s ResidenceTufts 7 0Three’s A Crowd 6 0Upper Wallace 5 2Hale 4 2Bradbury 4 3Snell 4 4Thompson 3 3Breckinridge 3 5Compton 0 3Shorey 0 4Lower Wallace 0 5Dudley 0 5Mixed WomenSPAM 5 1Full Court Press 7 3The Fun Girls 4 2To be Announced 4 3Efficient Mockettes 2 6Med flies 1 8Open Rec RedNo BS 5 0HiTops 4 0Hitchcock 3 1R-Nobs 3 2Pulse 1 4CCCP 0 4McCormick 0 5Open Rec WhiteThe Three O’s 5 0GSB 4 0Chamberlin 2 3Lexelon 1 2Orly’s 1 2N.U.T.S. 1 3Microbursts 1 3Hospitals and Clinics 0 4Sports CalendarWomen's BasketballFeb. 12 — at Grinnell College, 1 p.m.WrestlingFeb. 12 — Elmhurst College and IllinoisWesleyan University, 12 noon, awaySwimmingFeb. 12 — at North Central College (coed), 1p.m.FencingFeb. 12 — Notre Dame University, Universi¬ty of Detroit, Air Force Academy, 9 a m.,Field House In the mens undergraduate residenceleagues, Greenwood is in first place with aspotless 10-0. Chamberlin and Hitchcock Afollow close behind with records of 9-0 and8-0 respectively. Fishbein, FIJI, Dewey, andHale all have impressive records of 7-2.Henderson is in eighth place, having rackedup a competitive 6-2 record, and Comptonand Bishop trail the pack with relativelyweak records of 6-3.Undergraduate independant league stand¬ings show NUTS and Pulse to be tied for firstwith 8-3 each. R-Nobs follows with 7-2, rightahead of Jennys Jets with their 7-3 record.In the graduate leagues, No BS and TooSwift out-class the other teams, with re¬cords of 9-0 and 8-0. If you want to see somegood graduate ball being played, comewatch these teams rack up the points.With only two weeks left in regular sea¬son, we may see some of the lesser knownteams making their push to be included inthe extremely lucrative (IM point-wise)finals.Next week will see some drastic conclu¬sions to some heavily competitive winter in¬dividual IM events. For four weeks, the clos¬et athletes and noted jocks in every househave been grappling for individual honor onthe courts and behind the cue stick and theping-pong paddle.In women’s racquetball, the champion¬ship match between Comptonite Kathy Pe¬terson and Upper Wallace’s JenniferHolmes will bring five rounds of stiff compe¬tition to a head. Mens undergraduate resi¬dence racquetall had a great number of en¬trants, and is presently in the fourth roundand predictions now are impractical. In un¬dergrad independant play, Tim Heidingermeets Vince Krasevic next week for the in¬dependant title.Woman’s billiards sees some strangecompetition in its semifinals, as Comptonroommates Shauna Smith and Tracy Lubasgo up against each other for a seat in thefinals against the winner of the match be¬tween Snell dormmates Betsy Nichols andDawn Sadowski. Men’s billiards, again withan incredible number of entrants, is stillonly in the third round.The winner of today’s womens doublestable tennis match between the Snell teamof Kim/Hahn and Look/Kleiman fromUpper Wallace will meet the tough Three'sA Crowd team of Drake/Stack. In the menscompetition, semifinal matches betweenRichardson/Yoon (Henderson) andWang/Kim (Dudley) and the Maclach-lan/Filaroo (Hitchcock) vs. their as-of-yetunknown opponent will bring a champion-Women roll over NorthThe women’s basketball team posted itseleventh victory of the season with a 58-54defeat of North Park College. The Maroons’record now stands at 11-5. The victoryclinched a winning season for the team. Lastyear’s team finished at 8-14.Chicago played what coach Diann Nesteltermed one of the team’s best defensive ef¬forts of the season in the first half ofWednesday's game by holding North Parkto just four field goals. Nestel noted the de¬fensive play of Sheila Dugan, BeverlyDavis, Helen Straus, and Gretchen Gates.Gates led the team in scoring with 20points. Karen Walsh added 11. Wendy Pietr-zak pulled down ten rebounds to help theteam’s effort. Dana Howd pulled down seenrebounds and contributed seven assists.Pietrzak had six assists.The team has five games remaining on itsschedule. Four of these games are confer¬ence games, including Saturday’s game atGrinnell. A victory there and Chicago will ship which promises to be spectacular oneround closer.Due to the unfortunate collapse of a bas¬ketball basket in the ailing Ida Noyes gym¬nasium and the controversy over illegal en¬trants in the Coed competition, both coedand mens doubles badminton tourneys will -0be postponed indefinitely. oYah of the week: Last week, the only en- otrant in the undergraduate independant ®coed badminton competition was the team rof Lichtor/Javors from the Psi U fraternity; gthe operative word here is fraternity. The -nteam beat the undergrad residence winner, ”but the question still remains as to where fCthe Psi U female team member came from. >Either this team had a participant from an munauthorized residence, or somebody in the ”frat does a pretty good dragBASKETBALL RANKINGSMen’s Undergraduate Top Ten1. Greenwood2. Chamberlin3. N.U.T.S.4. Pulse5. Hitchcock A6. R-nobs7. Jenny’s Jets8. Fishbein9. FIJI10. DeweySwimmers sunkBy Edward AchuckThe swim meet between Chicago andLoyola this past weekend repeated the fa¬miliar theme of this season. Both the men’sand women’s teams lost by narrow margins.The men lost 40-55 and the women lost42-53.The men’s team won three of the 11 eventsheld, but kept close to the Loyola team byhaving many second and third place finishesin each of the events. Phil Hoffman andMike Noble were the only firs! place finish¬ers for Chicago. Hoffman placed first inboth the 1000-yard freestyle and the 200-yardbutterfly. Noble placed first in a close 500-yard freestyle event.According to assistant swim coach BillBean, several swimmers on the men’s teamachieved their season’s best times. Fresh¬man Everett Lee had his best time in boththe 100-yard freestyle and the 200-yardbreaststroke. In the breaststroke event, Leewas out touched at the wall for first place,and missed the school record by five sec¬onds. The 400-yard freestyle relay team ofPark College 58-54clinch a winning conference record, as itsconference record is now 6-3. Chicago playsat Lake Forest next Saturday before return¬ing home to take on Monmouth on Feb. 19.G.W. OmClAMS1519 E. 55thTtLMMUSlafe on prtnnt tor to»t iotvko from#*ropiocod ton— duphcotod and pro-»<rtp;»om tilled SportsVincent (skins) and Upper Rickert(shirts) battle for a reboundGraduate Top Five1. No BS2. Too Swift3. NELC4. Cliff’s Divers5. Spike’s GangWomen’s Top Five1. Tufts2. Three’s A Crowd3. Upper Wallace4. Hale5. Spamby Loyola teamsHoffman, Noble, Alex Pound and Mike Rud-dat was also out touched at the wall for firstplace, but it was this season s fastest timefor the team.The women’s swimming team also wonthree of the 11 events held. The 200-yardfreestyle relay team of Martha Kinney.Katie Moran, Virginia Seymour and KimLynch placed first. Kinney was the onlyswimmer to place first in an individualevent for the women’s team. She won the200-yard freestyle and the 100-yard butter¬fly. In the butterfly event, Kinney achievedher best time for the season, and missed thenational qualifying time by seconds.Assistant coach Bean says that he ispleased with the performance of Seymour inthe 100-yard freestyle. She shaved 3 secondsoff her best time during the meet, and 14seconds for the season.Both the men’s and women's teams havethree meets left in the season. The first ofthese is this weekend at North Central Col¬lege.Does the End ofthe Term Mean theEnd of Your HospitalInsurance Protection?Short Term Hospital plan providesfast low cost "interim" coverage ifyou're in between jobs., or recentlygraduated.It offers a choice of 60, 90, 120,or 180 day protection. Comprehen¬sive coverage. Low rates. And thepolicy can be issued on the spot.That quick.Let me tell you the details of thisquick coverage plan.Lord & RogersInsurance Agency4747 West Peterson Avenue Suite 400Chicago, Illinois 6064b282-6900***** MARDI GRAS PARTY *****sponsored by Les Beaux ParleursTUESDAY - FEBRUARY 15 - 9-11 PM - IDA NOYES - 3RD FL.Dancing - live French rock • Croissants • Kings Cake • Orleans Punch • $1.00 at doorThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983—17Classified AdsSPACEMichiana, Michigan: Lovely year-round house2 blocks from beach. All appliances, frpl. Ir.S59,900. Call 947-8703.3 bedrooms condominiums for sale 55th streetand Everett. Call 357-7926 evenings 979-6091days.Room in spacious 3rd fir. apf. avail. Mar. 1Near transp., shopping. $132+ dep. 684-8024 7-8pm.Furnished room near campus. $125/mo. 324-0654.APT. FOR RENT-HYDE PARKA fine 1 bedroom apt. in Hyde Park. One Halfblock from all your shopping needs and 4' 2blocks from U of C. Renf $360 + up. Call forstudent + senior citizen discouns. 52nd +Woodlawn. For inspection call 643-6428 or 4932525. and senior citizen discount. Ask for Mr. War¬dian.Females wanted to share a very nice twobedroom apt located just two blocks from campus. Call 241-7461.3 BR ranch on 2 lots in completely private set¬ting in Beverely Shores, Ind. 45 min. from U ofC by car or train. Cent, air attached 2 cargarage. Alum, siding. 5 appliances. $67500 CallRenard at Callahan Realty. 219-926-4298.Extra Ige. studio; carpet, appls, heat incl.dinette, kitchen, brt., clean. 57th + Dorch.avail. 3/$; sec. dep. req. $330 mth. 643-1350.University Park Condo for Rent 2 Bed-2 Bath$660/month. Available Immed. (Eve) 947-8327.SUBLET SPR/SUM, unfurnished studio apt insecurity building on lake. Dr, kitchen, pool,parking, on bus routes. $359 UC stud/staff, $399others. Available mid-March 493-7989.5114 BlackstoneLarge 2 bedroom apt. IV2 baths. $500. Call MikeMisura 268-3384 or Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525.APT FOR RENT6101 S. GreenwoodOne months rent will move you in. No securitydeposit required Best credit application willbe accepted. Call 731-0303, 8am-8pm or 493-2525.K IMBAR K-IN HYDE PARKLimited Time OnlyThree bedrooms, 2 baths, V2 block from shopp¬ing center, 4 blocks from the U of C. Studentdiscount will be considered. Apartmentavailable immed. Remodeled throughout. $650.Call Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525CHICAGO BEACH APTS.•T0 S Cornell Ave.One bedroom + studio apts for rent. Manyw/fine view of the lake + skyline. One blockfrom all your shopping needs + wifhin walkingdistance of the U of C campus. Rents are $260for studios and $370 for 1 bedrooms. Rents in¬clude heat + utilities. Call 493-2525 for student 41/2 Condo nr UC -500S Cornell nr IC&exp. bus.bale, call 288-7373.Fern roommate wanted for 3-bed apt. 54th &Ellis. Partly furnished sunny bedroom, onminibus routes S175/mo call 947-0360 after 6p.m.Must rent: 2 bdrm, 54th +- E11 is, $395 643-4562.Fur Apt/Rms Kitch. Priv. Nonsmo 363-3458/955-7083.Apartment at 5240 S. Ingleside 2 bedrooms liv¬ing room sunporch kitchen full bath $425 amonth call Zin 753-4070.One bedroom apt. $275, studio $200. Incl. all butelect, student discount on quarterly rntl 5210Woodlawn. Call 684-5030 bef. 8:30 a m.INTHE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremises. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800.BEGiNNEQ QQ ADVANCED Cost is aoout the same as a semester «n aU S college S3.189 Price includes #e? 'ounp trip to Sevrtte from NewYorK. '00m fcoard, and tuition compete Government grants and loansavaiiaoie for ei*gio»e studentsLive witfi a Spanish family attend c'asses tour hours a day four days aween tour months 6am 16 hrs of credit (equivalent to 4 semesterstaught ir US colleges over a two year time span) Your Spanishstudies win oe enhanced Dv oooo'tun.ties not available naUS class room Standardized tests snow our students language skins superiorto students completing two year programs m U S Advanced coursesa»scHurry, it takes a tot of time to make an arrangementsSPRING SEMESTER — Fee 1 • June 1 1 FALL SEMESTER — Sept 10Dec 22 eacn yearFULLY ACCREDITED A program ot Trinity Christian CollegeSEMESTER IN SPAINFor full information —write to:2442 E Collier S.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506(A Program of Trinity Christian College)MEDICAL SCHOOLFull scholarships are available to medical and osteopathy students.* Tuition* Academic Fees* Textbooks* Supplies plus$556 per monthTo qualify you must have taken the MCAT, be a U.S. Citizen of goodmoral character, and pass a physical examination. This is a com¬petitive program with limited openings. Application should bestarted prior to medical school acceptance.APPLICATIONS ARE BEING ACCEPTED NOWContact: TSgt. Chris Sakay111 N. Wabash Suite 1805Chicago, IL 60602(312) 263-1207/1224mmmA great way of life18—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 11, 1983 SPACE WANTEDNeed an efficiency apf. or furnished room nearUniversity March 1 thru July 31. Have appoint¬ment at Bar Center. Write or call Don Landon, Box 10064. Springfield, Mo. 65808. Phone(417) 883 7869.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962 8859.RIGHT HANDED SUBJECTS needed forstudies on brain functions and perception$3/hr.962-8846.OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year roundEurope, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All Fields.$500 $1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write IJC Box 52-14-5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625Friendly, responsible person needed to accompany young teenager to school within HydePark. Needed daily, 8 to 8:45. 363-5228.Bright, Outgoing, Capable, individual to assistoffice of Housing Cooperative 25-30 hrs perweek. Call 684-0111 Mon thru Fri 2-9.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE" YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.51st & Kenwood. For sale by owner, completelyremodeled 1 + bdrm condo, eat-in kitchen, gasfireplace, off street parking, sauna & exerciseroom. $49,000. Call Rod 955 4203.South Shore Condo 2BR many extras 44000 978-6542 eves.MOVING SALE Sofa w/sleeper $40 Queenbed$40 Dining Table 4 chairs $40 B + W TV loungechairs Rugs Dressers Much More! Fri-Sat Feb12-13 10-5 pm 1418 E Hyde Park Apt 304 Hansen268-3508. NIKON Binoculars9x25$89.95!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55th 493-6700TDK SA90 $2.99!!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55th 493-6700FUJI VHS TAPES $11.95!!!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55th 493-6700SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.JAMES BONE, EDITOR TYPIST, 363-0522.PROFESSIONAL TYPING-reasonable rates,684 6882.Exp. Typist Turabian Phd Masters theses.Term papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.Typing. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Correcfive Selectric. All projects welcome. 791 1674.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available 962-6263.RESUMES TYPESET at LOW RATES byBiggs Press of Hyde Park. Also typesettingand design of flyers, ads, programs, etc. Call268 0289.Private Ice Skating Instruction for childrenand adults. Hours flexible. For more information call 791-1894or 752 5069.Psychologist forming therapy group in HydePark to change women's longstanding struggles with uncontrlled eating. RosalindCharney, Ph D. 538 7022.Dating Group: Advanced Degrees/lntroductions telephone matches unmarried, degreedHyde Parkers and many others with care andalacrity. Try us. For callback information:363-9073, anytime.They all type but do they kill? THE ASSASSINTYPES just $l/pg. No mistakes. Ever. 6842559.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Large or smalljobs. Competitive prices. 324-5943, 667 4285.CalendarFRIDAYConcrete Gothic Theatre: Sartre's Victors 8 p.mReynold’s Club Theatre 1st fir. $3/$2.50 call962-7585 6-9 p.m.SAO Ticket Discount: Last Day for ANDRES SE¬GOVIA Tickets only $9 8 p.m. March 13. Call753-3592 or come to Rm 210.Music Dept: Bruce Tammen — baritone: KitBridges — Piano 8 p.m. Goodspeed HallO.B.S.: Third Annua) Choir Concert celebratingBlack History Month 7:30 p.m. Rockefeller Chap¬el. Free.DOC: Raiders of the Lost Ark 7 p.m. & 9 p.m. Man-del Hall $2LSF: To Kill A Mockingbird 7 & 9:45 p.m LawSchool Aud. S2U.C. Asian Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30p.m. Augustana Lutheran Church, 55th & Wood¬lawn. Info call: 288-5274.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30p.m. 4923 S Kimbark. Topic: "Humility in Aca¬demics'' U.C. Professors invitedU.C. Ski Team: Meeting and films 7 p.m INHCrossroads: English Classes: Beg. 10 a m.; Int.10:45 a m.IBM Personal Users Group: Meeting 12 p.mSS402Midway Studios: Performance Art-Phi! Berkman— 8 p.m. $2.50/$l.50 Info call 753-4821Arabic Circle: Abd el-Sattar el-Tawila of Rose el-Youssef magazine, Cairo. Pick 218 3:30 p.m.Hillel: Women’s Tefilah Shabbat Services 5 p.m.;Reform-Progressive Shabbat Services 5 p.m ;Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner 6 p.m,: Lecture:Mrs. Nava Y Danon on "The Impact of JewishLaw On Israeli Statutes And Court Decisions" 8pm.Mineralogy-Petrology Seminar: Robert N.Schock, "Point Defects in Olivine: Effects on Pro¬cesses in Earth’s Mantle” 3 p.m. Hinds 101Geophysical Sciences Colloquium: Ngar-CheungLau, “A Survey of Diagnostic Studies on the Pro¬perties of Transieont Eddies in the NorthernHemisphere Wintertime Circulation” 1:30 p.m.Hinds Auditorium. Refreshments at 2:30 p.m.Common Room.SATURDAYMen’s Fencing: U.C. vs. Notre Dame, U. of De¬troit. & Air Force Academy 9 a m. HCFHSmart Gallery: Fan Painting Demonstration byMonica Liu 1p m. FreeMusic Dept.: International String QuartetChamber Music Workshop for info call 962-7628Early Music Series: Kuijkien trio 8 p.m. MandelHall call 962-8068/962-7300 for ticketsDOC: Raiders of the Lost Ark 2:30 p.m. Cobb $2;Man of Iron 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb $2 LSF: The Palm Beach Story 7:15 & 9:30 p.m Law-School Aud. $2Crossroads: Buffet Dinner 6 p.m.; Discussion:"Chandhi: The Film and the Man.” 7:30 p.m.Oriental Institute Films: Megiddo: City of De¬struction 2 p.m. Auditorium FreeBaroque Organ Works: Benjamin Lane, Organ:Kathryn Pohlmann. Recorder: Julie Jeffrey.Viola da Gamba: 4 p.m. Church of St. Paul and theRedeemer S. Dorchester at 50thHillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:15 a m.; Up¬stairs Minyan 9:30 a mSUNDAYWoodward Court Lecture: David N. Schramm,depts. physical sciences, astronomy & astrophy¬sics, "The Origin of the l inverse” 8:30 p.m Wood¬ward Court Cafeteria. Reception to follow .Oriental Institute Films: Megiddo: City of De¬struction.Music Dept: International String QuartetChamber Music Workshop call 962 7628. Auditorsare also welcome.DOC Films: Heart of Glass 8 p in. Cobb S2LSF: Destry Rides Again 8:30 p.m. Law School$2Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch Group, $1 75 persandwich, 11 a.m.-l p.m. Hillel Foundation.Music Dept: International String QuartetChamber Music Workshop for info call 962-7628Brent House: Episcopal Eucharist and Supper,Brent House, 5540 S. Woodlawn. 5:30 p.mCAUSE: Film about Nicaragua. Women in ArmsEast Lounge 2nd floor Ida Noyes HallChurch of St. Paul and the Redeemer (Episcopal):Organ Recital by Benjamin Lane FREE 4 p.m4945 S. Dorchester at 50th St.MARRS: Meeting for all interested Ida NoyesHall 4 p.m.Folkdancers: International folk dancing. IdaNoyes Hall. Teaching: 8p.m. Request dancing: 10p.m.Rockefeller Chapel: University Religious ServiceFrank E. Reynolds preaching. 11 a mMONDAYDOC Films: Hurry Sundown 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Crossroads: English Classes: Beg. 10 a m.; In-termed: 10:45 a m. Beg Spanish 7:15 p.m. BegDutch 7:30! p.mHillel: Israeli Folk Dancing. $1, Blue GargoyleFolkdancers: International Folkdancing, begin¬ning and intermediate levels. Ida Noyes Hall.Teaching 8 p.m. Request dancing 10 p.m.Judo Club: practice 6 p.m. BartlettChem. Dept: Prof. Mostafa F. Amr Fl-Sayed,"Energy 1 ransfei and Spectral Diffusion in Disor¬dered Solids” 4 p.m. Kent 107SCENESWriters workshop PL 2-8377Hyde Park Artisans Valentine Open HouseFebruary 12 12pm-4pm Jewlery Prints Draw¬ings Batik and more. Beautiful Gifts at Sen¬sible pries. 57th + Woodlawn at the UnitarianChurch 12-3 Fri. Sat. 12-4 Sun. 10-1.Tkts. still available for Feb. 15 7:30pm Comedyof Errors $10.50 Rm. 210 Ida Noyes 753-3591.SPRING BREAK VACATIONS! 1) Daytona:Drive for $125. 2) Ft. Lauderdale: Drive for$167. 3) Bahamas: 7 nights Hotel & Airfare for$369. 4) Ski Steamboat, Colo, for $215 incls: 7nights deluxe condo & 5 day lifts. Call Sun. &Ski Adventures: 871-1070.LSF: To Kill A Mockingbird. Feb. 11, 7:00 and9:45 pm. All proceeds will be donated to theChicago Law Foundation. DELAYED MAIL SERVICE$l/letter $5 for 20 send letters along with dateto be mailed to: P.O. Box 53352, Chicago, IL60653.POLARITYBALANCINGTension and blocked energy restrict both yourcreative potential and relaxation. PolarityBalancing, though manipulation and exer¬cises, helps you release blocks in your naturalhealing energies so you may use them more ef¬fectively. Non-sexual. Call Bob Rueter at 324-7530 for information or appointment.BALLET FOLCLORICONACIONAL MEXICO-A breathtaking per¬formance March 6 2pm $11.25, $9.75. $6.75 tktson sale until Feb. 15 Rm. 210 Ida Noyes 753-3591. /Chinese New Year Dinner-Party: Sat. 5 p.m.,3rd fir. 1212 E. 59th Admission $2.PERSONALSHappy Valentines Day to all you ROLLINGSTONES!!!To Michael Hill: you stole my heart, now comeback for the rest. Happy Valentine's Day,Love, Apryl.Party With The Best — Saturday 12 Feb. ICan't Get No Satisfaction!!!DEAR MICK, HAVE A BEAUTIFUL DAY. ILOVE YOU! DEAR KEITH, I LOVE YOU,TOO!P.N.-P.K. is the only man for you. Happy b-daytho late I is. Remember Sally Salamander ok-CSB-School Babe: How about some midnight soft-ball on the Midway? Backgammon at eleven? Ilike having you around. Buenos Sabados!Pumpkin Buns: 'Coupon Good for One Super*‘Valentine's Day Back Massage’ DEMAND-92 VIDEO DATAMANAGEMENTCLASSDemand-92 is an easy-to-use video datamanagement system available on theDECSYSTEM-20 computer. Learn how to useit in a FREE seminar taught by the Computa¬tion Center on Friday, February 11, 3:30 - 5:00p.m. in Harper 406. All are welcome, but aknowledge of rudimentary functions and com-mandsof the DEC-20 is assumed.LOX AND BAGELBRUNCHEVERY SUNDAY - 11:00 A.M. -1:00 P.M. Alsoorange juice, coffee, tea, tomatoes and onions.Unbeatable prices. Cost: $1.75 per sandwich.H i I lei Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn Avenue.ISRAELI FOLKDANCINGMondays 8:00 p.m. Blue Gargoyle 5565 S.University, 2nd floor. DONATIONS: $1.00Teacher: Dalla Paludis. Sponsored by HillelFoundation.Smurf it up on Valentine's Day (and everyday) Love to all —Melissa, Adina, Mary fromTCSD.Micky how far can people see? Not to the endof this, Kiddo. PHAPPY BIRTHDAY LIL' REE-AM!WILDER AND CRAZIER THAN EVER!!!My Roommate is TOTALLY UNATTACHEDSomeone give her a break on Valentine's DayHowaboutitPIZZAOn Fridays at the Blue Gargoyle. 11:00-2:00pm5655 University. Catty corner from ReynoldsClub.STEPTUTORINGHelp a child feel bright and intelligent.Volunteer to tutor elementary or high schoolstudents for two hours a week. Contact Mike at241-6394 (evenings) for more information. NEEDATYPISTExcellent Work7167. Reasonable Rates. Tel. 536HOTLINETRAININGThe U. of C. hotline will be conducting a train¬ing program for new staff members duringspring quarter. If you are a graduate orundergrad, student who is planning on beinghere next year and are interested in finding outmore about becoming a member of our staff,please attend one of the following informationsessions: Feb. 9th Ida Noyes E. Lounge, Feb.17 Ida Noyes Library. For info call 753-1777.SWEDISH MASSAGEValentines Day is almost here. A great gift fora loved one, or treat yourself. Certified, licens¬ed masseur with 20 yrs. experience. Appoint¬ments - Great Lake Hot Tubs. Ph. 527-1312 or955-1973. Private tubs available. Gift cer¬tificates! !CationW ■'nilEHD,afth0 f9§4 Ofymptc Gsmm PROGRAMProgrammed AutomationPlus Shutter-PrioritySophistication.System Integration. • PROGRAMMED AUTOMATION—just focus and shoot1• SHUTTER/PRIORITYAUTOMATION• Fully automatic flash photogra¬phy• New split/micropnsm• Total of 8 user-interchangeablefocusing screens (optional)• Optional Power Winder A2. Aand Motor Drive MA available• LED readout in viewfinder• Manual mode• Accepts more than 50 Canonwide-angle, telephoto andzoom lensesSpeedlite 188A andPower Winder A2 shown optionalmodel camera1342 East 55th • 493-6700 Classified AdsPAUL TAYLORDANCE CO.They are famous! Don't miss it! March 19 8pm$11.25 $8.25 $6.00 On Sale Until Feb. 28 Rm 210753-3591.CELEBRATEMARDI GRASThe French Club plans a smashing Mardi Grasparty Tuesday Feb 15 9-11 PM, Ida Noyes 3rdfl. Live French Rock. Croissants au chocolatand other pastries. Subd by Student Govt, soonly $1 at door. Improvise a face mask!COUNTRY ATTHE PUBCountry & Chicago style Folk music by TomAngland at the Pub lOpm-midnight Feb 17Come watch the Hill St. Blues before the showat 9pm Pub membership required 21 & overw/UCID Membership only $2 at door.LOOK"Inquiry" is looking for papers for ourWinter/Spring issue. Deadline: Feb. 25. Sub¬mit to Ida Noyes Checkroom or call MirahGermain-753-224-or Lisa Frusztajer-363-7685.GANDHIDISCUSSION: "Gandhi: The Film & theMan." Sat. Feb. 12-7:30 pm. Crossroads-5621 S.Blackstone.MUSIC AT THE PUBCome hear a variety of live entertainmentThursday nights lOpm-midnight at the PUBimmediately following the Hill Street BluesPUB Membership Required 21&over w/UCIDMOVING AND HAULINGDiscount Moving and Hauling free packing ser¬vice free estimates references courteousanytime Bill 493-9122 If no a ns keep trying.DELTA SIGMA SOCIETYOFFICER ELECTIONS on Tuesday, Feb 15 at9:30 pm. Ida Noyes. GUADALAJARASUMMERSCHOOLUniversity of Arizona offersmore than 40 courses: anthro¬pology, art, bilingual educa¬tion, folk music and folkdance, history, political sci¬ence, sociology, Spanish lan¬guage and literature and inten¬sive Spanish. Six-week ses¬sion. July 4-August 12,1983.Fully accredited program.Tuition $400. Room andboard in Mexican home,$425.EE0/AAWriteGuadalajaraSummer SchoolRobert L. Nugent 205University of ArizonaTucson 85721(602)626-4729American HeartAssociationr fy/a/'/of/eL V j &ea/ Cj< Safe ^o.v 493-0666C ALL ANYTIMENEAR AND FARAND IN-BETWEENNear Campus: 59th & Harper -3 BR. 10% $85,00058th & Blackstone -3 BR. fireplace $102,00057th & Kenwood -1 BR. —sunny $64,50057th & Kenwood -1 BR. —2 study $64,00057th & Kenwood -2 BR. $63,00057th & Kimbark -1 BR. $49,50057th & Stony -2 BR. Co-op $39,00056th & Kimbark -1 BR. $39,00056th & Kimbark -2 BR. $58,00055th & Kimbark -3 BR. Gar. $89,50056th & Harper —Townhouse $112,00056th & Everett -3 BR. $112,50055th & Everett -3 BR. $62,000Far (But Close) 73rd & South Shore Dr. -6 Co-op $29,50027th & Michigan -8 Rm. Townhouse $118,000In-Between 53rd & Blackstone -6 rooms $79,50050th & Dorchester -6 rooms $76,00050th & Dorchester -House- 8 rm. $172,000I 50th & Woodlawn -8 rm. $138,000The Chicago Maroon—Friday. February ll, 1983—19'F