-1' -grey city journalHYDING IN ABSTRACTIONcover politics profileDemocraticmayoral candidatespage five -The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 37 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 18, 1983Tuition increased over 12 percent for 1983-84By Darrell WuDunnThe Board of Trustees approvedtuition increases of over 12 percentfor most University students yes¬terday.The increase will raise the un¬dergraduate tuition from $7050 to$7920, an increase of 12.3 percent.Tuition in the graduate divisionswill increase from $7395 to $8310,an increase of 12.4 percent, whiletuition in the professional schoolswill range from $7980 for the Grad¬uate Library School and School ofSocial Service Administration to$9405 in the Law School.The “term bill” which consists oftuition, required fees, and roomand board, will increase more than11 percent for students in the Col¬lege. The “term bill” will increaseto $12,058 for freshmen and to$12,513 for upperclassmen living instudent housing. The required feesare $15 for student activities, $108for student health service, and $15for use of athletic locker facilities,which was charged separately inthe past.Charges for room and board formost freshment entering this fallwill be $3880. For an upperclass¬man on a full board contract andliving in an average single,charges will be $4470.The tuition increases approvedyesterday are significantly lowerthan the 17 percent increases dur¬ing each of the past two years.The University is also raising by30 percent the amount of unres¬tricted funds available as financialaid to undergraduates. About $5million, up $1.2 million over lastyear, will be offered to College stu¬dents in scholarships. At the same time, the Universityreaffirmed its policy of admittingstudents without regard to finan¬cial need and of helping provide anaid package that will meet the indi¬vidual student’s assessed need.“We are determined to continuethe policy under which no qualifiedundergraduate student is deprivedof admission for financial rea¬sons,” said President HannaGray.For students in the graduate di¬visions, about $6 million in unres¬tricted funds will be offered in theform of aid, an increase of 14.8 per¬cent over the $5 million availablethis year. The increase to studentsin the Humanities Division will be16.8 percent and to students in theSocial Sciences Division, 17.7 per¬cent. In these two areas, consider¬ably less federal student assis¬tance is available than in thebiological and physical sciences.“W’e will continue to do ourbest,” Gray said, “to assure grad¬uate students of the funds theyneed to engage in on-going work atthis institution through fellow¬ships, scholarships, loans, andother forms of assistance.”A total of $16.7 million in Univer¬sity scholarship and fellowshipfunds will be made available in1983-84. Of that amount, $14.3 mil¬lion will come from the unrestrict¬ed academic budget, 17.7 percentmore than 1982-83. The remaining$2.4 million will come from theUniversity’s restricted scholarshipfunds. A small increase is expectedin grants from federal and statesources and no decrease in thelevel of loans.Continued on page 23 TUITION FOR THE 1983-1984 ACADEMIC YEAR:AREAThe College 1982-83$7050 1983-84$7920 PERCENTINCREASE12.3%Graduate Divisions 7395 8310 12.4Graduate Library School, School o<Social Service Administration 7230 7980 10.4Divinity School,Committee on Public Policy Studies 7230 8115 12.2Graduate School of Business 8500 9400* 10.6Law 8550 9405 10.0Pritzker School of Medicine1st and 2nd year students3rd and 4th year students 800110,668 915011,955** 14.412.1*MBA candidates take ten courses instead of the usual nine;•Third and fourth year Medical School students register for four quarters.No consensus on biology andethics at Round Table discussionBy Guy WardThe four panelists Leon Kass.Richard Landau, James Shapiro,and James White did not reach aconsensus answer to the question“Biology and Ethics: is therknowledge we should not have?” atthe Round Table discussionCrimes up slightly in 1982 butrapes rise sharply jobberies dropBy Jeff TaylorInstances of rape in the HydePark-Kenwood area increased byover 36 percent in 1982 while rob¬beries were down by 21 percent,according to the year-end crimereport of the South East ChicagoCommission (SECC).The rise in rapes was attributedin part to two separate series of at¬tacks, in which police establishedjatterns and made arrests. OneSECC law enforcement coordin¬ator Robert Mason suspect was convicted of six rapes,another of two.Michael Murphy, executivedirector of the ‘'ECC, said rob¬beries appear to l continuing on adownward trend, spite severalinstances last January. “We havebenefited from good patrol by theCity police and University Securi¬ty,” he said.SECC Law Enforcement Coor¬dinator Robert Mason agreed thatrobberies were down because of“good aggressive patrol,” thoughhe said there have been no arrestsin connection with three robberiesthat occurred near the front of Bur-ton-Judson dormitory Jan. 19 and20.The overall crime rate in HydePark rose by 2.7 percent, about theaverage for the rest of Chicago.The area covered by this year’scrime report was increased to in¬clude the area north of the Univer¬sity bounded by 47th and 44thStreets and Cottage Grove andGreenwood Avenues. Mason saidthis is one reason for overall rise in crime.“The major increase appears tobe thefts from autos, which has hitthe neighborhood like an epidem¬ic,” Murphy said. During themonth of January alone, more than50 thefts from cars were reported.Mason said no single area of thecommunity could be pinpointed forincidence of crime, though mosttend to occur in central Hyde Parkfrom Woodlawn to Dorchester, 51stto 54th. “With the exception ofthefts, the main campus areas ap¬peared to be free of crime during1982,” he said.“Good patrol can prevent streetcrimes,” Murphy added, “but youcan’t really prevent crimes of pas¬sion, like murder.”According to a survey Murphyconducted with the police depart¬ment, half of all rapes committedoccur insideHe also said, “The vast majorityof felonies are committed by per¬sons living outside the (Hyde Park-Kenwood) neighborhood.”Continued on page 22 Wednesday nightRather, when Moderator JamesGustafson asked the panel for ananswer to the general question, theresult was a split decision.The first to address the overflow¬ing crowd at Swift Lecture Hallwas Kass. Henry Luce Professor inthe College and professor in SocialThought. He took an immediate po¬sition on the issue. T would like toargue that there is indeed somebiomedical knowledge we shouldnot have,” he said. “As I under¬stand our question it asks notwhether we have a right to knowbut w hether it is always good for usto know,” he said.Kass stressed that he did not op¬pose knowledge itself, but instead,the undesirable applications of cer¬tain knowledge. “(Often), the gapbetween knowledge and applica¬tion is very small,” he said.“Therefore we can reasonably ex¬pect that once the knowledge isavailable its use will be assured.”He offered three examples.First, he asked. “Do we want toknow the pharmacological basis ofhallucinations? Do we want toknow the pharmacology of plea¬sure?” Kass felt that the abuses ofdrugs we might develop "evenmore powerful than heroin” wouldcancel out any benefits of such stu¬dies.Second, he noted the dangers ofinvestigations into the biology ofaging and extended human life¬span. “I think an analysis mightlead to one to conclude that the so¬cial consequences of everyone’schoice for a longer life would behighly disruptive,” he said. Last,Kass criticized the possibility of a chimpanzee-human cross, whichwould present society with “halfmen” and the problem of how todeal with themWhen one student asked Kasswho would get to decide what ap¬plications of knowledge are unde¬sirable. Kass responded by point¬ing out how easy it is to say that noone is wise enough so no one canmake the decision He said. “We dohave a mechanism for decidingit,” which he said is American rep¬resentative democracy. “It seemsto me that the decision to encour¬age (research) presupposes asmuch knowledge as not encourag¬ing (does*.”Next to speak was James White,professor in the law school, the Col¬lege. and on the Committee for theStudy of the Ancient Mediterra¬nean World. He focused first on theethics of placebo experiments or“double blind” studies duringwhich half of a group of patients isgiven a drug while the others re¬ceive placebos. He said the inher¬ent deception in such an experi¬ment involves “serious ethicalcharacter problems.” The doctorin this case subordinates his role as“healing artist” to his role as a“scientific knower ” White said.“This practice is justified on thegrounds that “We (Often) do notknow whether drug A is better thandrug B ” Through placebo experi¬ments, “we can aquire knowledgewhich will tell us that drug A is bet¬ter than drug B and we can give ev¬erybody A instead of B and every¬body will be happier in the longrun ”Continued on page 22JThis is why on February 22we will punch line 12 forRichard M. Daleyfor MayorDaley's program for senior citizens can restore Chicago's national leader¬ship in program development for the well-being of older people. He alreadygave us the Nursing Home Reform Act and mental health reforms that canoffer protection and advocacy for the disabled.—Bob AhrensAs a long time activist in Hyde Park Kenwood, I am convinced that ourcommunity and its institutions need Rich Daley as Mayor. He knows how tobuild coalitions; he listens to community concerns; he has an urban agendathat is realistic and balanced. He has won respect from a wide array of peo¬ple in the civic, business and academic communities.—Paul BergerThe complexity of problems and opportunities that face the City of Chica¬go can only be addressed by government working with dedicated leaders ofevery community, members of civic groups, and professionals from diversedisciplines to analyze the problems and develop solutions. The Mayor ofChicago must provide the leadership which results m an environment oftrust m which there is respect and appreciation for good government andgood politics. Richard Daley’s record as State’s Attorney has shown that heis capable of attracting and keeping good people to advise him on his poli¬cies, and competent professionals to administer his programs.—Pastora San Juan CaffertyRichard Daley has demonstrated himself to be a master of the art of thepossible. His record in public office of campaign promises kept is by far thebest of the three candidates. Chicago needs accomplishments, not image.—Jarl Dyrud, M.D.Rich Daley’s achievements warrant his election as Mayor. As a Senatorhe was effective. He has been outstanding as a State’s Attorney. Hisstrengthening of the prosecution effort m Juvenile Division is particularlyimpressive. Chicagoans need a Mayor who is clear on the issues. Rich Daleyis that Mayor—Edward W. Gray, Jr. We support Richard M Daley for Mayor because he cares deeply aboutall neighborhoods and all people of Chicago. He offers sound fiscal manage¬ment and an end to burdensome taxation which leads to families and indus¬tries leaving the city. He will fight for Chicago’s fair share of Federal andState revenues.—Gayle and Morris Janowitz/ am impressed with Richard M. Daley’s ability, his experience, his performance. His work as State’s Attorney shows he is an efficient and knowl¬edgeable administrator; he knows how to seek out and to keep good people,how to get and use good advice, how to be constructive. He knows Chicago.I am for him because Chicago, particularly during these times, needs thebest Mayor it can get.—Edward LeviAs State’s Attorney, Richard M. Daley has appointed an excellent staffand vigorously supported them without regard to patronage or party politi¬cs. ..he will do the same as Mayor.—Norval MorrisRichard M. Daley has pushed for more State aid to the public schools,and he has recognized the need for improved in-school counseling, increasedinvolvement of parents and community organizations m the education of ourchildren, and the need to gear that education to the requirements of today’stechnologies. He has promised to appoint to the School Board the most capable available persons devoted to those goals and to make his selections—contrary to the practice followed by Jane Byrne—from recommendationssubmitted to him by a citizen’s advisory commission. He deserves oursupport.—Pearl RiegerChicago is very much in need of a Mayor who can and will provide stablegovernment, who knows what must be done and how to do it, who m his decision8 will be guided the most by the needs of all the people and the leastby political considerations, who can and will attract and keep good peopleto run the city government. I support Rich Daley because, based on his record, he is the candidate who fits that description. While I have a lot of admiration for Harold Washington, I think that in the next four years it isDaley who can do the best for the people of Chicago, including the Blacks.—Aureen L. WinterHyde Park-Kenwood Citizens Committee*Mrs Albert A Abelson Bertram J. Cohler Diana Havill Mr & Mrs. Phillip Kurland Edward Mondello Donald Rowley, M DRobert Adamczyk Phillip Collins, M O Patricia Heilman Gerald Laros, M.D. Norval Morris Carol SamuelsRobert Ahrens Dave Conklin Mr 4 Mrs. Robert A Helman Mr & Mrs. Ross Lathrop Mrs. Marilyn Moltz Dr. 4 Mrs Nathan SchlessingerMr 4 Mrs Lance Alberti Jack Du Vail Arthur Herbst, M D. Mr 4 Mrs Edward Levi Lauren Moltz Ezra SensibarPenny Anderson Jarl Dyrud, M.O Mrs Leonard J. Horwich Bernard Levin, M.D. Bruce Moran John G. SevcikMr & Mrs David Badal Edna Selan Epstein Jason Huebsch Ronnie Levin Mr Raymond Mulherin Maxine SoshnikMarietta Barbour Richard and Eileen Epstein Mr 4 Mrs. Sidney Hyman Harold K. Lewis Gloria Needleman Marion SternCourtenay Barber, Jr. Mr & Mrs. Otto Felsenberg Michael L. Igoe. Jr Joan Lewis Mr 4 Mrs. Phillip Nowlen Carole StodderLynn Bender Mrs. Ann Fennessey Faye Isenberg Richard A Lewis Eugene P 0 Brien Peter StodderMr & Mrs. Paul Berger Dwight Frankfather Benjamin Isom Dr Robert Lewy Mr 4 Mrs. Richard Orlikoff Dorothy M TaylorHarold A Black William R Fry Deone Jackman Rodney Libby Karen Peterson Sadako TenganThomas J. Boodell, Jr. Milt Furgatch Mr. & Mrs Richard Jaffe James H. Lorie Gail F Pine Naomi L TillmanA.L Brodny Mr 4 Mrs James Gets Mr & Mrs Morris Janowitz Roberta J MacGowan Mr 4 Mrs. Geoffrey C M Plampin Draga 4 Stan VesselinpvitchMr & Mrs Joel Brownstein Mr 4 Mrs. Emanuel Goldman Mr & Mrs. Paul Johnson Mr 4 Mrs. John Malarkey Louis Pliss Nathalie WeilNoel Naisbitt Brusman Julian Goldsmith Emile Karafiol Jack McGarry George A Ranney, Jr Mr 4 Mrs. Charles WerhaneRobert K Burns Norma Press Goldwyn Winston Kennedy Martin W. McGarry Mr 4 Mrs. Greg Richardson Simmie WhitsonPastora San Juan Cafferty Nancy Good sell Frank Kinahan Mrs Mary Kontos Harold A Richman Gail WilsonMr 4 M,s James Clement Oliver Goold Homer King Salvatore R. Maddi Pearl Rieger Mr 4 Mrs. Frank WinterKim Clement Mr 4 Mrs Jerry Gould Raymond Kuby Jean Meltzer Mary Roseff Franklin ZimringZita Cogan Edward W Gray. Jr Joseph Kuper Harold R. Metcalf*in formationVolunteer at 1650 E. 53rd Street • 643-55322—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983 Paid for by Citizens to Elect DaleyNews BriefsFellowhips inPublic PolicyThe Committee on Public Policy Studieswill award four Exxon Foundation Fellow¬ships to graduate students at the Universityof Chicago who enroll in the One Year Mas¬ter’s Degree Program in Public Policy Stu¬dies, Autumn Quarter, 1983. The Fellow¬ships cover full tuition plus a $1000 stipend.The one-year program is open to anygraduate student who has completed atleast one year of study in a graduate divi¬sion or professional school at the Universityof Chicago. No previous coursework in poli¬cy analysis is required.The program involves three quarters ofinterdisciplinary training in policy analysis,including a basic core sequence in econom¬ics, statistics and political analysis. At thecompletion of the year in Public Policy Stu¬dies the student receives the Master of ArtsDegree and can return to his or her originaldepartment or professional school.The Exxon Foundation Fellowships aresupported by an Exxon Foundation grant in¬tended to provide training in policy analysisto supplement other academic or profes¬sional studies.Applications to the Committee on PublicPolicy Studies and for the Exxon Founda¬tion Fellowships are available in Wieboldt301, or by calling 962-8401. The deadline forapplications is Mar. 1.SSA dean namedLaurence E. Lynn, Jr. has been nameddean of the School of Social Service Admin¬istration, effective July 1, 1983. He will suc¬ceed Margaret Rosenheim, who has beendean for five years and plans to return tofull-time teaching and research.Lynn is presently professor of public poli¬cy at the John F. Kennedy School of Govern¬ment at Harvard University, a program hechaired from 1978 to 1982. He held positions with several federal agencies until 1973 andwas Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institu¬tion until he joined that Harvard faculty in1975.President Hanna Gray said that Lynn’sappointment continues “the tradition of SSAdeans with deep concerns about and broadintellectual interests in social issues affect¬ing the less fortunate in American soci¬ety.”Lynn is an expert on public policy analysisand social welfare issues.Akira Iriye3 profs becomeDistinguishedThree professors have been made Distin¬guished Service Professors, effective Mar.1, 1983. They are Akira Iriye, professor andchairman of the department of history;Friedrich Katz, professor in the departmentof history, who was named to the Morton D.Hull Distinguished Service Professorship;and Marshall Sahlins, professor in the de¬partment of anthroplogy, who was named tothe Charles F. Grey Distinguished ServiceProfessorship.Dr. Clifford Gurney, a professor in the Pritzker School of Medicine, was named tothe Addie Clark Harding Professorship, ef¬fective Jan. 1,1984. He has served as deputydean of the Biological Sciences Division andthe Pritzker School of Medicine.Hanna GrayGray out of race forU of Cal. presidencyUniversity of Chicago President HannaGray is no longer being considered for thepresidency of the University of Californiasystem, according to The Daily Californian.The student newspaper had reported earlierthat Gray was among the ten finalists underconsideration by the UC President SearchCommittee. However, The Daily Californiannow reports that the field has narroweddown to three: Michael Haymand, chancel¬lor of UC/Berkeley; David Gardner, presi¬dent of the University of Utah; and Presi¬dent Weber of the University of Colorado.A spokesperson for the UC Board of Re¬gents would not confirm The Daily Califor¬nian’s story, saying that about ten candi¬dates are still being considered, down fromthe original pool of 250.Earlier this week. Gray told the Califor¬ nian Board of Regents that she was extre¬mely happy with her situation at the Univer¬sity of Chicago and that she would ratherremain here.Lecture to examinereligious cultsEdward M. Levine, professor of sociologyat Loyola University, will speak on “Reli¬gious cults: are they really religious?” onFriday, Feb. 18 at 8:30 p.m. at the B’naiB’rith Hillel Foundation at the University ofChicago, 5715 S. Woodlawn Ave. The lectureis free and open to the public.Computer evolutionlecture at museumThe “Evolution of Computers” is the sub¬ject of the first in a series of lectures givenin honor of the Museum of Science and In¬dustry’s 50th anniversary. The lecture willbe given by Marvin Minsky, one of the na¬tion’s leaders in the field of artificial intelli¬gence, at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 20, in themuseum’s auditorium.The lecture is the first of four in the “Dis¬tinguished Scientist Lecture Series,” whichis sponsored by Motorola. The lectures areto deal with the impact of technology, inter¬stellar molecules, and science as an instru¬ment of world peace. The rest of the serieswill be given on Mar. 20, Oct. 23, and Nov.6.Time Schedulesavailable nowSpring quarter time schedules are avail¬able today. Students may obtain copies inthe advisors’ area on the second floor ofHarper, in the offices of deans of students inthe professional schools, and in departmen¬tal offices of the graduate divisions.VHSlm Atrjwn BeAi524-man -ju music“America may be witnessing the start of an African pop music invasion, as Nigeria’s KingSunny Ade’ and His African Beats have begun their U. S. tour with sellout performancesin Boston, Washington D.C. and New York.”— Variety “Africa’s Sunny Ade’ launches his first national tour -and America discovers new worlds of blackdance music.”— NewsweekTICKETS AVAILABLE ATTHE REYNOLDS CLUB TICKET CENTERUNTIL TIME OF SHOWUC STUDENTS $5 • OTHERS $15VISA OR MASTERCARD ACCEPTED MANDEL HALLSAT. • FEB. 19 *8 PMWITH SPECIAL GUESTPAUL BERLINERPERFORMING THE MUSICOF ZIMBABWE & BEYONDThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983—3—THE|YDE PARK=Shopping Center^This Thursday thru Monday-February 21.Grab your scarf and hurry to our Presidents' DaySale this weekend. Your neighborhood HydePark Shopping Center merchants haveplanned special prices on the thingsyou need right now to help youstretch your cold hard cash.City GirlCohn and SternDoralee, Ltd.Fanny MayFritz on 55thHyde Park Co-opPark Lane HosieryShoe CorralSusan GaleWalgreensWoolworthsAt your service:Flair CleaningHemingway’sHyde Park Associatesin MedicineHyde Park BankHyde ParkCurrency ExchangeDr. M. R. Maslov,OptometryWarm up to“Presidents’Day” SaleSavings. • • International HouseSpeaker Series PresentsROBBIE SABELCOUNSELOR FOR POLITICAL AFFAIRSISRAELI EMBASSY, WASHINGTON D.C.THE CURRENT SITUATIONIN THE MIDDLE EAST:AN ISRAELI VIEWPOINTMONDAYFEB.21,19837:30 PMHOMEROOM,INTERNATIONALHOUSE,1414 E. 59th ST.THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE BEDROOMS•Unfurnished and furnished•U. of C. Bus Stop•Free Pool Membership•Carpeting and Drapes Included•Secure Building - Emily's Dress Shop•University Subsidy for Students & Staff•Delicatessen 9Beauty Shop•Barber Shop 9T.J.'s Restaurant•Dentist 9Valet ShopFREEPARKINGMr. Keller 752*38004—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983Local PoliticsThe Democratic mayoral primary: candidates profileby Judith ColpNext Tuesday, after nearly three monthsof considerable wooing by the three majorcandidates, Chicago voters will cast theirballots in the Democratic mayoral primary.Chicagoans have long been accustomed tointense political infighting, and the 1983mayoral struggle has not failed to disap¬point those most ardently sympathetic withFDR who once quipped, “I love a goodfight.” Incumbent Mayor Jane Byrne, CookCounty State's Attorney Richard M. Daleyand US Congressman Harold Wasington arethe major Democratic candidates. At stakein this election is not only the economic andsocial policies that will govern the city forthe next three years, but the way in whichCity Hall is organized, laws are implement¬ed, and the extent to which government isopen and responsive to its citizens.RICHARD M. DALEYThe name “Daley” is one of the best knowin Chicago. Richard M.’s father, Richard J.Daley, was the city’s most famous and con¬troversial mayor whose term in officespanned 21 years. Son Richard is proud ofhis name and his father’s devotion to thecity, but is adament about running on hisown merits. He believes he has the neces¬sary experience to become an effectivemayor.After eight years in the State Senate,Daley was elected in 1980 as Cook CountyState’s Attorney. As State’s Attorney, Daleyhas helped to cut down on the city’s crimerate by increasing felony convictions andcriminal trials, improving prosecution ofrape and domestic violence cases, establish¬ing a narcotics prosecution unit to targetdrug dealers and a Gang Prosecution unitwhich has resulted in increased convictionof dangerous gang leaders and members.Daley also cites his special nursing homesunit that resulted in upgraded standards innursing homes, his organization of a newConsumer Affairs program and his successin collecting back taxes from individualsand corporations. The State's Attorneymaintains further that he has appointedonly capable staff members, actively re¬cruited and promoted minorities, andopened his office to community participa¬tion by establishing task forces and adviso¬ry councils.Daley says that he is running for Mayorbecause “under Mayor Byrne this city gov¬ernment has had no sense of where it isgoing, where it has been, or even the precar¬ious financial situation it is in now. It has noplans, no planning process and no capablemanagement.”FISCAL POLICY: Daley promises to endhigh increases in water and sewer fees andto abolish the city sales tax on car pur¬chases. He is also committed to fighting forthe elimination of the state sales tax on foodand medicine.Daley says that the city budget can be bal¬anced without tax increases if “wastefulspending is eliminated and sound manage¬ment is introduced into city government.”Richard M. Daley million, that would be made in the budgetunder his administration: $30 billion by end¬ing consultant fees, $15 million from termin¬ating so called “no bid” contracts and in¬stead making bidding for city contractsmore competitive; $2 million from person¬nel reductions in the Mayor’s office; $20 mil¬lion in better cash management and statecollection of the city sales tax; $10-20 millionin administrative efficiencies and $25 mil¬lion by decreasing the number of men onsanitation trucks without imposing lay-offs.Daley also believes that citizens should takepart in the budgetary process.JOBS: Daley has castigated the Mayor forher $10 million temporary jobs program. Hebelieves that a Job Development Corpora¬tion should be established which would workwith unions, businesses and government toestablish employment opportunities. Daleyalso promises to fight recent trends in na¬tional industry that has resulted in, for ex¬ample, the aerospace industry being cen¬tered in the Southwest. The State’s Attorneyfurther believes that the responsibilities ofthe Economic Development Corporationshould be increased to enforce public-private partnership. Daley also pledges toaid small businesses and encourage job re¬tention.SCHOOLS: State’s Attorney Daley has saidthat he will fight for increased state aid forChicago schools. He has also suggested thatthe School Board members be selected fromthe recommendations of a citizen’s advisorycommittee, that vocational and technologi¬cal education be increased and in-schoolcounseling improved.HOUSING: Daley promises to increasefunds for house improvements, to institute a“housing rehabilitation code,” to modernizezoning ordinances, to reform the housingcouncil, and to revitalize the Department ofHousing.CITY HALL MANAGEMENT: Daley hassaid that under his administration each city-department would be required to establishclearly defined goals. Daley also believesthat the government must be “professiona¬lized” to attract the best talent, that thePlanning Department and Housing Com¬mission must work to “depoliticize” city de¬cision-making and that citizens should begiven access to public records.HAROLD WASHINGTONHarold Washington likes to distinguishhimself from his two opponents. He the only-black candidate, in a city in which he be¬lieves minorities have yet to receive theirfair share of government funds and jobs.Washington is also the only candidate run¬ning that has not in some way been involvedwith the traditional Chicago Democraticmachine which has resulted, he declares, ingross inefficiencies and inequities. It istime, Washington believes, for a change.Washington served in state politics for 15years, first as a state representative, thenas a state senator. In 1980 he ran for the Con¬gress as an independent candidate and waselected as representative from the first dis¬trict. In 1982 he was re-elected with the high¬est plurality of any Congressman running inthe nation that year.In Congress, Washington serves on theHouse Education and Labor Committee, theHouse Government Operation Committeeand the Judiciary Committee. As one of theleaders of the Black Caucus, he helped tolead the fight for extension of the VotingRight’s Act. Washington has also been astaunch opponent of Reaganomics, andhelped to defeat the President’s MX Missileplan. The Congressman has introduced billsto protect the steel industry, establish acomprehensive job training program, tight¬en the Child Nutrition Act and establish anArea Development Program to revitalizebusinesses in inner city areas.Harold Washington declares that he run¬ning for Mayor because “Jane Byrne is de¬stroying the city of Chicago...by fighting forcontrol of city patronage...and fat cat city-contracts for her cronies at the taxpayer’sexpense.”FISCAL POLICY: Washington is the only-one of the three major candidates to supporta tax increase. Charging that the fiscal poli¬cies of the Byrne administration will resultin a $100 million public transit shortfall inJune and a $170 million school shortfall in September, Washington has proposed tofight for a state income tax increase of onepercent with those earning less than $15,000exempt. Washington also promises to estab¬lish a Chicago Tax Reform Commissionwhich would suggest other ways to raiserevenues and develop suggestions for de¬creasing regressive local taxes.Washington contends that under theByrne administration the budget has beenincreased by 303 percent. He believes thatmillions of dollars could be saved by estab¬lishing a program of energy conservation inall municipal areas, abolishing “do-noth¬ing” departments such as the Departmentof Neighborhoods, the Department of Con¬sumer Services and the Office of MunicipalInvestigations, making the City Comp¬troller an elected position as an effective“fiscal watchdog,” establishing an Office ofProductivity and Innovation to target reduc¬tion areas in city departments, and creatingwith the City Council a Chicago Investmentpolicy. Washington also pledges to work forincreased state and federal aid, as well asstarting immediate work on the 1984 budgetwith active participation by citizens, busi¬ness and city council.JOBS: Washington has attacked the Mayorfor her Industrial Revenue Bonds whosepurpose was to stimulate employment butwhich Washington maintains has resulted ina loss of some 363 jobs. He further maintainsthat less than half of those trained by theMayor's Office of Employment and Train¬ing can actually find employment. Washing¬ton pledges to continue his fight in Congressfor a jobs program. He is also committed toestablishing a Chicago Industrial Develop¬ment Corporation that would enable busin¬esses to acquire low-interest loans, and aDepartment of Employment and EconomicDepartment. The Congressman furtherpromises that under his administration city-funds will be allocated only- to those busin¬esses which will stimulate jobs, and thattraining programs will be expanded andsmall businesses aided.Harold WashingtonHOUSING: To improve standards in hous¬ing Washington pledges to uphold the rightsof tenants and to create an “Energy Conser¬vation Bank” that would encourage conser¬vation through loans and grants. The Con¬gressman also believes that tax breaks onmortgage payments should be made avail¬able to low and moderate income residents,and that a Task Force of Partnership shouldbe formed with representatives of all thesectors of the Housing industrv.CITY HALL MANAGEMENT: Washingtondeclares that under his administration “thepatronage system that breeds waste andcorruption” will be ended and “that city-workers will be required to do a full day’swork all year long. But then will not be re¬quired to pay into anybody’s campaign fundor work in anybody's campaign.” Upon tak¬ing office. Washington has said that he willissue a Freedom of Information ExecutiveAct which would open up city records to thepublic.JANE BYRNEJane Byrne, the incumbent, is running onher record as Mayor She belives that heradministration has “been characterized by-aggressiveness and bold management ofmunicipal issues and a willingness to tackleissues head-on.” She is particularly pro id ofthe fact that it was under her administra’ionthat Chicago was awarded the prize as 'he“most livable city” at the 1982-1983 Confer¬ence of Mayors.After 22 years in city government, Byrn*feels she "knows how to get the job done.’In 1968 she was appointed the first commis¬sioner of the City’s Department of Con¬ sumer Affairs, weights and measurementsunder the administration of Richard J.Daley. She served in this post for ten years,and from 1975-1976 served with Mayor Daleyas co-chairperson of the Cook County Demo¬cratic Central Committee. In 1979, afterDaley’s death, Byrne ran for Mayor as anindependent nonmachine candidate againstJane M. ByrneMichael Bilandic, Daley’s hand picked suc¬cessor. Thanks at least in part to a particu¬larly snowy winter, which Bilandic was un¬able to control. Byrne won the Democraticprimary and went on to become the city'sfirst woman mayor.FISCAL POLICY: The mayor maintainsthat when she took office the city was “onthe brink of financial collapse.” By “ar¬ranging bond issues, eliminating hidden def¬icits, setting up new audits and cuttingcosts,” Byrne says that she has made thecity financially strong. Chicago has a higherlong term bond rating than several majorcities, a balanced budget, and a $30 millionreduction in real estate and head tax.Byrne concedes that she has been forcedto increase taxes, but says that the actualincreases are substantially lower than heropponents charge. She does not foresee theneed for anv future increase in taxes.Byrne is most proud of her $1.2 billionCapital Works program which has gone intoimproving streets, bridges and sewers.Byrne also has plans for further such worksin redeveloping Navy Pier, revitalizing theNorth Loop and O’Hare airport, and build¬ing a new library. Byrne also points to hersuccess in having Chicago picked as the sitefor the 1992 World’s Fair which will bring anestimated $2 billion in new businesses and$300 million in capital improvements. She isalso working to have Chicago chosen as thelocation for the 1984 Democratic NationalConvention.The Mayor says she has encouragedtourism by providing summertime festivalssuch as Taste of Chicago. Chicagofest andeight neighborhood festivals as well as ac¬tively promoting the city- on television ad¬vertisements.JOBS: Byrne maintains that her capitalworks program has stimulated employ¬ment. She says that the World's Fair will re¬sult in 34,000 new jobs. The Mayor also de¬fends her $10 million jobs program whichprovided 34,800 temporary jobs, as well asher jobs programs in high schools and city-colleges.SCHOOLS: Mayor Byrne says that shesaved the schools from collapse without re¬sorting to tax increases. She does not fore¬see a deficit in the school budget. Byrne alsoreconstituted the School Board to make itmore representative of the various commu¬nity interests and minorities. She has in¬creased the number of minorities on theschool Board from three to seven out of ele¬ven members. The Mayor also conducted anationwide search for a new Superintendentof the Chicago Board of Education and final¬ly settled on Ruth Love of Oakland.Continued on page 23The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983—5EditorialsLettersLetter is 90%invective argumentTo the editor:I was rather dismayed upon reading JesseHalvorsen’s letter in Friday’s Maroon. It isdisturbing to me, and a poor reflection onthis school, that a student can reach fourthyear here and still believe that an effectiveargument can be composed of 90 percent in¬vective, and five percent each of histrionicsand imagination. If I understand the lettercorrectly, the issue that causes Mr. Halvor-sen so great an upset is whether or not theUniversity should support the Draft Regis¬tration. This naturally leads to the questionof whether civil disobedience is acceptablein this case. As I disagree with Mr. Halvor¬sen’s vehemently stated conclusions, Iwould like to attempt to dredge his argu¬ments out of the emotional morass intowhich he cast them, in order to deal with them point by point.The first issue of any sharpness is raisedin the third paragraph, after the all-impor¬tant issues of Messrs. Levergood and Kos-tuch’s political affilliations and anatomicalanomalies are covered. This point is that“...your premise, that registration for thedraft is no big deal, is wrong.” I am cleverlyconfounded here by Mr. Halvorsen, as hehas given no supporting argument for me torefute. I can only state that, in my opinion,registering for the draft is the “moral equiv¬alent” of registering to vote. As such it is nota big deal. It enables your government to lo¬cate you when it is time for you to fulfill yourresponsibilities (Yes, Mr. Halvorsen, votingis a responsibility, though I find it difficult toimagine that you exercise it as such). I con¬sider it an evasion of adult responsibility,not a “moral statement,” to refrain fromregistering; unless of course one is equallyeager to refrain from voting. In my morali¬ty, privilege and responsibility are inextric-The 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 WuDunn Margo Hablutzel Nadine McGann Wally DabrowskiEditor Features Editor Grey City Journal Editor Production ManagerAnna FeldmanManaging Editor Cliff GrammichSports Editor Keith FlemingChicago Literary ReviewEditor Steve BrittBusiness ManagerJeffrey TaylorNews EditorWilliam RauchNews Editor David BrooksViewpoints EditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Paul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorSteve ShandorCopy Editor Jay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerStaff: Edward Achuck, Zlatko Batistich, Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, Jeanne Chap¬man, John Collins, Kahane Corn, Pumima Dubey, Maeve Dwyer, Tom Elden, PatFinegan, Lisa Frusztajer, Caren Gauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, JesseHalvorsen, Joe Holtz, Keith Horvath, Jim Jozefowicz, Mark Kramer, Linda Lee,Kathleen Lindenberger, Jane Look, Frank Luby, Nick Lynn, Bill Mudge, Jack Pon¬omarev, Amy Richmond, Craig Rosenbaum, Yousef Sayeed, Koyin Shih, Nick Var-sam, John Vispoel, Guy Ward, George Woodbury, Andy Wrobel, Kittie Wyne. Keep Larry Bloom,Tim Evans as aldermenIn next Tuesday’s aldermanic election, the Maroon strongly supports the re-election of 5th Ward Alderman Lawrence S. Bloom, and the re-election of 4thWard Alderman Timothy C. Evans.Bloom has been an outstanding alderman in his first term. He has fought forcity services for the ward, open and honest city government, racial justice, and.other worthy causes. The main issues in the campaign are adequate representa¬tion for the ward (i.e., can white alderman Bloom represent the black majorityof the ward), city services in the ward, and the ability of the alderman to providejobs for his constituents. Bloom, much to his credit, has done a good job in reach¬ing out to all the constituents of his ward, be they from South Shore, Woodlawn,or Hyde Park. He has destroyed the myth that independent aldermen cannotprovide city services for the ward. His service office, located in the ward’scenter to adequately serve all, ensures that city services are delivered. Bloomdeserves the support of all in the ward, and needs it, because he must gain amajority in the crowded field to gain re-election.Bloom’s three chief challengers are Josie Childs; 7th Ward Alderman JosephBertrand, now a 5th Ward resident; and Frank Bacon. Childs has made somegood points about the dichotomy between the northern and southern ends of theward, but we believe that Bloom is conscientious about representing all his con¬stituents. Bertrand has done an adequate job in representing the 7th Ward, buthas not performed as well as Bloom in representing his constituency, and hasinterjected the issue of race into the campaign to discredit Bloom’s ability torepresent the 5th Ward.Bloom’s chief challenger is Frank Bacon. Bacon has proposed services whichBloom has not delivered such as, the extension of the Jackson Park el to StonyIsland down to 75th then to the lake, but has failed to provide any idea of howthese services would be financed. Bacon represents the effort of Cook CountyDemocratic Party Chairman Edward Vrdolyak’s attempts to wrest control ofthe 5th Ward from the IVI-IPO and give it to the Regular Democratic Organiza¬tion. We will not take sides in this conflict, but do express regret that an ex¬cellent alderman could be left as a casualty in this battle.In the 4th Ward, the choice is not so clear; however, out of the three top can¬didates, Evans, Michael W. Smith, and Toni Preckwinkle, the Maroon supportsEvans based on his experience and growing independence. Smith has run a veryrespectable campaign, with a seemingly sound program for the ward and anaccurate perception of the dichotomy in the ward between the IVI-controlledsouthern end and the northern areas of the ward, controlled by the RegularDemocratic Organization. Preckwinkle, the IVI-IPO endorsed candidate, hasput forth good ideas on volunteer coordinators for providing city services in theward.However, Evans’ accomplishments in providing economic development forthe ward, his accomplishments as chairman of the City Council Health Commit¬tee, and his increasingly better use of his voting power in City Council gives himthe edge. We do hope that Mr. Evans is as sensitive to all segments of the diverseward population after the election as he has been since the Chicago ward re¬map. Furthermore, we hope that Hyde Park-Kenwood support for Evans will beinterpreted by him as a sign that some voters in this neighborhood are willing tolisten to his ideas not only as alderman, but also in his role as Regular Demo¬cratic committeeman. In return for this attention, we hope that Evans continuesto display independence as a committeeman in supporting Democratic candi¬dates best for the community.ably linked, and refusal to serve thiscountry implies a willingness to give up thehigh standard of living, social mobility, andindividual liberties (within the confines ofresponsibility) that this country affords.Mr. Halvorsen’s second point is a bit dif¬fuse, but seems to indicate that studentswho need financial aid ought to get it fromthe government, whether they register ornot. (Why does this bring to mind the imageof Federal unemployment benefits beingdistributed to convicts?) I reiterate thatprivilege implies responsibility. If a citizendisregards his responsibility to register, heforfeits the privilege of receiving Federal fi¬nancial aid.This brings us to the dual questions ofwhether the University should support thislaw, and whether the law itself is a good one.In Mr. Halvorsen’s letter these issues aredealt with together, in one inspiringly tan¬gled mass of misdirection. Forgive me mysimplicity; I must treat them separately.Contrary to Mr. Halvorsen’s statement, thefirst question really is one of whether theUniversity should respect the law. Mr. Hal¬vorsen’s delightfully slanted rephrase,“...how will the University maintain its tra¬dition of integrity and academic credibilityin the face of a new and despicable piece oflegislation?” does not alter the decision tobe made. ^Mr. Halvorsen must have rea¬lized this, for his next sentence draws themorose conclusion that “This question can¬not be sidestepped.”) No matter what Mr. Halvorsen’s personal opinion of the law, it isa law, and he is asking the U of C to under¬mine it. To his query “Why does offering al¬ternatives (to obedience) encourage disobe¬dience?” I can only reply with helpless, con¬fused silence, as the responses which cometo mind would lower me to Mr. Halvorsen’slevel of arguing.It seems that Mr. Halvorsen would havethe University subsidize the “political” ac¬tions of a minority of malcontents. In otherwords, draft evaders should be allowed todabble in political activism, while the Uni¬versity assumes the financial responsibilityaccrued by the exercise of this privilege.This is clearly not a proper redistribution ofresponsibility. Draft evaders, not the U of C,are responsible for their actions.The moral question, of the “rightness” ofthe law, may be addressed with the help of asimple statistic. Mr. Halvorsen deplores theinvocation of the “tyranny of the majority”in a case where he claims there is “no evi¬dence of a consensus.” Mr. Halvorsen, I putit to you that the 90 percent rate of sign upnationwide represents at least some evi¬dence of a consensus. These young menwere not forced into signing up. They werefree, as you are free, to practice civil disobe¬dience, and accept the responsibility. Theyare not free, nor are you, to exercise a privi¬lege while abdicating responsibility some¬one else.Jeffrey KitzierFourth year student in the College6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983Viewpointspolitical access means fiscal excessBanning lobbies:By David BrooksIn the past decade, the theory of conflicting factions ex¬pressed in Federalist 10 by James Madison has been shownto be obsolete, or at least of limited application. Madisonargued that though liberty would ensure that some body ofcitizens would inevitably seek action inimical to the whole,the views of a contradictory group would inevitably balancethe original group’s intent, and yield a beneticiai or harm¬less result.Since 1973 democracies around the globe have been en¬during a period of slow economic growth. With that relativestagnation, we have witnessed a growing rivalry betweenseparate interests, over the shrinking resources of govern¬ment. In the days of moderate or rapid growth, there wasalways enough candy to spread around to ensure a measureof domestic peace. But now the candy is not so easv to comeby organized groups have formed delegations to send toWashington in order to more efficiently gather federal goo¬dies. These special interest groups, or lobbies, are reallyfactions.If a faction of munitions makers comes to Wasnmgion iupress for a stronger defense, legislators will naturally re¬spond to it. Legislators are quick to learn that they aremore amply rewarded by grateful munitions makers thanthey are punished by the mass of citizens who scarcely no¬tice that a few7 pennies have been taken from their walletsto help the munitions giants.Similarly, if a faction of tobacco makers create the Amer¬ican Tobacco Institute (which they have) to press for federal subsidies for tobacco growers (which they do), they willget their money (which they have) and chances are, nobodybut the few people who study Congressional Digest willknow that somebody passed a law7 for tobacco subsidies.If, on the other hand, the people w7ho w7ant to ban hand¬guns send a lobby to Washington, they will be met by theNational Rifle Association. Legislators realize that the pen¬alties of offending either group far outweigh the advan¬tages of pleasing one of them, so they will either avoid theissue entirely or take an ineffectual position.The same thing happens — to take an issue from the otherside of the political spectrum — when Deople who want toban abortions are met by the pro-choicers.In 1975, the Trilateral Commission sponsored threeessays entitled “The Crisis in Democracy.” The commonthread running through each essay was that the size andcomplexity of our decision-making process is causing a pa¬ralysis because too many people have power to exert in pol¬icy matters. There are too many vetoes. Faced with poli¬cymaking indecision, the real power shifts to faceless bureaucrats, who have not proved to be the objective man¬agers that people like Max Weber had hoped.The results of lobbying efforts, therefore are 1) appea¬sement of lobbying groups in cases where these factionscan be bought off with federal funds, and 2) paralysis wheremore federal money will not provide an answer.Milton Friedman has been talking a great deal recentlyabout the first of those results. He points to the fact thatevery year the government spends more and more whilepublic opinion registers greater degrees of disgust with fed¬eral spending levels. “The paradox reflects a defect in ourpolitical structure,” he wrote recently in the Atlantic, “weare ruled by a majority — but it is a majority composed of acoalition of minorities representing special interests.”Friedman asserts that “a minority may lose more fromprograms benefiting other minorities than it gains from theprograms benefiting itself,” and given a choice, “it mightbe willing to give up its own programs as part of a packagedeal eliminating all programs.”To give factions this choice, and to reduce federal spend¬ing, Friedman has constructed his own version of the pro¬posed constitutional amendment to require a balanced bud¬get. As we might have expected. Friedman’s version is themost intelligent and sophisticated around. But as we alsomight have suspected, it is a patch-up affair from a manwho sees government as an evil.Liberals, people w7ho think that government is capable ofmuch good, have to come up with a counter-proposal. Itmust do more than patch up the paradox created in our po¬litical system by the awesome power of factions. It must notonly address the first problem of factions gone wild — thetendency for government overspending — but it must also solve the second — the tendency toward policy paralysiswhen contradictory factions appear. The counter-proposalmust get at the roots of modern factionalism.The answer is to adopt what I call the jury-box legisla¬ture. That is, to treat legislators as jurors — to keep them“locked up” (so to speak) on Capitol Hill, and have themhear only the testimony of invited witnesses, not the bother¬some pleas of factions. That is to say, we should ban allforms of lobbying and special interest groups.At first this seems to run against the need of the people tobe heard by their government, but let me remind you: thepeople do not govern themselves in America, they electother people to govern for them Let us watch those who wechoose carefully, and w7hen it comes time to consider re-election, let us judge our officials with a critical eye, but inbetween elections, for God’s sake, let’s leave them aloneAn elected official is not in office to vote the opinions of hisconstituents. The constituents voted for him or her becausethey felt his natural impulses best represented the way theyfeel. He is there to vote his own conscience, and he doesn'tneed bands of citizens knocking on his door trying to pres¬sure him into changing the way his conscience tells him tovote. These factions do more to annoy and distract thanthey do to enlighten.It’s time we free our government from these pests, so thatour elected officials can get back to the business of makingdecisions based on their beliefs, not on anti-democraticpressure groups.I don’t have any hope that this little proposal will ever beadopted; it challenges the most powerful of all, the factionrepresenting the factionsViewpoints policyThe Viewpoints section of the Maroon is a forum forideas, opinions, and analysis of issues that interest the Uni¬versity community. All students, faculty and staff are wel¬come to submit essays to be considered for publication.Viewpoints should be no longer than 1000 words andshould include the author's name, telephone number, andhis relation to the University community. Only essays writ¬ten solely for the purpose of publication in the Maroon willbe considered We reserve the right to edit any Viewpoint;however, the author will be notified in such instances.Viewpoints should be sent to Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St. For more information, telephone 753-3265.Viewpoints appearing in the Maroon do not necessarilyreflect the opinions of the editorial board.LettersNo to nine-weekquarter scheduleTo the editor:The current discussion among membersof the College Council over revitalizing un¬dergraduate education at the University ofChicago certainly merits applause. As theMaroon reports, there seems to be enoughpressure on undergraduates to warrantmodifications of the College’s academicstructures as remedies to the supposed illsof the student body. How'ever, it is unclearthat the proposal being considered moststrongly, a switch to nine-week quarters,would, as Dean Sinaiko claims, “make theoverall academic experience in the Collegebetter.” In fact, it is likely that such a change would either lessen the quality of ed¬ucation in the College or increase the aca¬demic pressure which the Council seeks torelieve.A reduction of ten percent in classroomtime would force either a corresponding cutin the material covered under the ten-weekquarter system or a compression of that ma¬terial into a shorter time span. It is difficultenough to discuss topics with sufficient de¬grees of ciarity and thoroughness in tenweeks; curtailing classroom time in nineweeks would only increase that difficulty. Inthe face of the added challenge to education,the faculty would have to decide between de¬leting subject matter from their courses orproceeding at a faster rate. Choosing theformer would mean less education: choos¬ing the latter would add to the heavy pres¬sure which the Council feels currently stifles students.There are other negative effects which achange to nine-week quarters would cause.For example, reduced classroom timewould decrease the opportunity for studentsto take advantage of the College's mostvaluable resource its faculty. Granting stu¬dents more free lime divert attention fromeducation, the College’s fundamental pur¬pose. for many students would use breaks inthe middle of the quarter for vacationsrather than use them to “think and reflect”upon their courses. Indeed, it is unclearwhether students really want readingperiods at the ends of their quarters. Beforelast quarter’s vaunted reading period, manystudents pressured their professors to givethem early exams during the time set asidefor study.Who would benefit from a switch to nine- week quarters’7 Despite the Council's evi¬dently stiong feelings to the contrary, thestudents would probably suffer from such achange for they would receive either lesseducation or added pressure Rather, it is li¬kely that the faculty would reap the benefitsof this plan in the form of reduced teachingduties. Before the College Council decides togive itself more free time, it should consultthe intended recipients/victims of its benev-ole’ice If this proposal were submitted to avole of the student body, I think that it wouldbe soundly rejected: the opinions I’ve gath¬ered from my peers support this belief. Atthe very least, if the Council decides to re¬duce classroom time by ten percent, itshould also reduce tuition fees by ten per¬cent.Michael RabiehFirst-year student in the CollegeFebruary 18 & 1925 & 268 PMREYNOLDS CLUB$2.50 with ID$3.00 generalFunded by SGFCConcrete Gothic TheaterpresentsTWO ONE-ACTS"7 HOURS: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHYOF EDVARD MUNCH"— Campbell McGrath"READING IN THE DARK"— Keith FlemingThe Chicago Maroon—Friday February 18, 1983—7-TAtsaviWl-CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishes.Open Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 £. 63rd MU 4-1062Hillel Presents A Lecture:ReligiousCults:Are They Really Religious?Prof. Edward M. Levine(Dept, of Sociology, Loyola Univ. of Chicago)Friday • Feb. 18 • 8:30 pmHillel House *5715 Woodlawn Ave.Ugly DucklingRENT-A-CAR &1608 E. 53rd Street$14.50 per day 200 Free MHesBetween 1C Tracks m. e*|y|ond Cornell ' 04? mI enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372 marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400EXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES • MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONINGENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TOPARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241-622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLETHE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEpresentsELIZABETH HOLTZMANDistrict Attorney, Brooklyn, New YorkFormer Congresswoman from New Yorkin aTALK AND QUESTION-AND-ANSWER SESSIONTuesday, February 22,1983,4:00 P.M. Swift Hall, Third-Floor Lecture Room8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983by Abby ScherHenry Hyde addressed an overflowcrowd last Friday at the Law School.Hyde, United States Congressmanfrom the western suburbs, was slatedto speak on “Reaganomics, Abortion,and the State of the Union.’’Hyde did not speak on Reagano¬mics, nor did he speak on the state ofthe union. Much to my disappoint¬ment, he spoke for only 20 minutes onabortion.Perhaps he changed his talk be¬cause he faced an unexpected audi¬ence: opponents of his anti-abortionstance in Congress. A few othermembers of the Women’s Union and Iwent with poster and leaflets andfound the Law Women’s Caucusmembers well organized and handingout buttons and pamphlets. Campusmembers of the International Social¬ist Organization — a group advocat¬ing democratically achieved socialism— and many other people wore but¬tons or carried signs in protest.What kind of man couid attract sucna committed protesting gathering?Hyde is one of the most active oppo¬nents in the House of a woman’s rightto decide for herself the moral signifi¬cance of abortion He sponsored theHyde Appropriations Amendment,passed originally in 1977, which with¬drew Medicaid fund'ng of abortion.He has co-sponsorec! the Human LifeBill which defines conception as thestart of a human iife If the bill ispassed, abortion would constitutemurder, with both doctor and patientsubject to prosecution: states could in¬vestigate every miscarriage as a pos¬sible self-induced abortion; the IUDand oral contraceptives which pre¬vent implantation of a fertilized eggonto the wall of the uterus would be il¬legal.Hyde, in his introductory statement,tried to set a moderate tone for therest of his talk. He denied being a sin¬gle issue politician. He separated him¬self from the “right wing nuts’’ whooppose abortion, many of whomwould “drop abortion if it did notserve their interests." He painted apicture of himself as a reasonablestatesman, open to “rational dis¬course,’’ who makes his decisionsbased on “facts."Speaking without notes, Hydejumped from economic issue to eco¬nomic issue for the first half hourwithout discussing Reagan’s broadeconomic program as such. Mention¬ing his recent trip to Japan, Hydepraised the Japanese government’sclose alliance with business. He be¬lieved that together they are ablesuccessfully to target weak Americanmarkets in order to undercut theirprofits. The American “philosophy"and laws, he said, prevent this kind ofclose cooperation here. He suggestedthat our government work with busi¬ness to coordinate otherwise compet¬ing research and development proj¬ects.Hyde’s corporatist idea has impor¬tant implications for traditional liber¬ ties. For example, he suggested thatthe ethic of academic freedom pre¬vents a “useful...new relationship be¬tween producers and those who teachthem."Abruptly changing the subject,Hyde voiced his support for foreignaid, because of the “tremendous(economic) interdependence" of theThird World and First World countries. Political junkets reveal the complex¬ity of international relations, he said,referring to his recent trip abroad.“You haven't lived until you sit acrossfrom a socialist member of Parlia¬ment in Australia and have a greatdebate on the Nuclear Free Zone.” Hedid not state his position on the Nu¬clear Free Zone.Raising Social Security taxes dis¬ courages business from employingworkers, according to Hyde, because“robots don’t pay into social securi¬ty.. don’t even take lunch hours." Headvocated raising the pension age asa way of lowering social security pay¬ments.Hyde introduced his discussion ofabortion with his first acknowledgem-continued on page 2A SANCTIFIED PRIDE LETS HYDE DECIDENO RIGHT TO DECIDE, HE CRIESMargaret Sanger selling her Birth Con-trol Review in the streets of New York,1915continued from page 1ent that the majority of his audienceopposed his views. “I know many ofyou are single issue people... I don’tmind single issue people... it dependswhat the issue is.”He justified his attempt to outlawwomen's freedom to choose abortionby claiming “it is my right and duty tosee my beliefs enacted through thepolitical process... (It’s not that) any¬one is forcing anything on anyone...”He first studied the issue when askedto cosponsor a liberalizing bill whilestill in the Illinois legislature. Afterreading scientific texts, he concludedthat “birth is just a change of ad¬dress,” “Every pregnancy terminatesat the end of nine months,” he said.“What these people are talking aboutis extermination...let’s be clear onthis.”Some pro-choice advocates claimthat the “quality of life” of a childand a woman is more important thanthe existence of “life,” pure and sim¬ple. He rejected this view, advocatinginstead a belief in the “sanctity oflife” no matter what its “quality.”“The main reason for courts and lawis to protect the weak from thestrong,” he said, referring to thefetus as a human being requiring pro¬tection from the woman carrying it.Hyde allowed only ten minutes forquestions. He called on three men firstand only one woman (me). In responseto a man who asked if he would advo¬cate capital punishment for womenwho had abortions, Hyde said that hebelieved only the abortionist shouldbe punished. He decried putting a“dollar sign in front of human life”when a man asked how many unwant¬ed babies were supported by wel¬fare.Throughout his talk, Hyde referredto “science” for proof of when humanlife begins. He explained in detail thejoining of egg and sperm as thoughspeaking to a high school health class.He sidestepped the question of what“human” means or whether sciencecould answer this question.So when he called on me (“Yes, thelittle lady in the back”) I mentioned that in the decision which deemedabortion constitutional, the SupremeCourt questioned its own ability to de¬fine when human life begins sincethere is no consensus among science,philosophy and religion. In my ownJewish tradition, I said, human lifebegins right before birth. Other reli¬gions believe life begins when thespirit enters the fetus. Who gave himthe right to define when human lifebegins, I asked?In response, he again said that thescientists define when life begins. Idenied that there was a consensusamong scientists on when a distincti¬vely human life begins. By now, theroom was getting restless with his an¬swers. Hyde said, “Well, it dependson how you ask the question.” Thecrowd exploded with laughter. If hesaid anything else it was lost in theroar. A woman announced a two min¬ute break. People left for classes andHyde never came back.Many questions were left unans¬wered with Hyde’s departure. Heclaimed that women no longer hadbackstreet abortions. Yet four womenwere reported to have died at thehands of inexpensive, unlicensedabortionists since his Hyde Appropri¬ations Amendment took effect. Criticsmight dispute his use of his politicaloffice — not to represent his consti¬tuents but to see his personal “beliefsenacted.”To build his rhetorical style, Hydeused beautiful abstractions like “pro¬tecting the weak,” adding personallife stories to. give the abstractionsweight. To support “sanctity” of lifeover its “quality,” for example, hediscussed a heroin addict who gave upthe drug and then helped other ad¬dicts to do the same. He discussed theBloomington Case in which a mongo-loid baby having an additional, termi¬nal birth defect, might have this de¬fect go uncorrected and be allowed todie. Note that neither case has any¬thing to do with abortion. Note, too,that he never used women in his ex¬amples.“Patriarchy” is an abstract word aswell, and perhaps as empty as “sanc¬tity.” But using Hyde as an example, Ican give you a better understandingof what I think it means than he couldof “sanctity.” The word “woman”barely passed his lips. Women are notused as examples because in his mind,they are not significant actors. Henever discussed how abortion affectsthe lives of the women who do or donot have them. Although he discussed“protecting the weak,” he never dis¬cussed the women who died becauseof the cutoff of Medicaid funding. Nordid he discuss the 2 to 5000 womenwho died a year from backstreetabortions before the Roe vs. Wadedecision in 1973. I can use his abstrac¬tions with examples of women to jus¬tify a stance opposite to his.Hyde, appropriating “science” and“reason” to defend his cause tries totake the decision of when "life”begins out of the intensely personalrealm, where women can have powerover their lives, and put it into thepublic arena of Congress, where menhold most of the seats of dominatingauthority. NANNERL KOEHANE, MICHELLE ROSALDO, ANDBARBARA GELPI (EDS.)FEMINIST THEORY: A CRITIQUE OF IDEOLOGYELIZABETH LANGLAND AND WALTER GOVE (EDS.)A FEMINIST PERSPECTIVE IN THEDIFFERENCE IT MAKES ACADEMY: THESEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORE5757 S. UNIVERSITYMONDAY—FRIDAY 9:30-6:00 SATURDAY 11:00-4:00for festive eating and drinkingEnjoy......fresh crepes, quiches, sandwichesunusually good salads andtempting dessert crepes...Join us early for hearty breakfast specials....and Hyde Park's best ice cream sundaes,full drink menu affordably pricedOur Chili is the best...we wonChicago s Great Chili Cook-Off1 overallNovember 1, 198053^St.&667-2000/TTTrm m 111111 m\Tonight at 6:15 and 10:15: Warren Beatty,Diane Keaton, and Jack Nicholson in Beatty’s all-star epic of love and revolution, Reds.Saturday: no show at Doc. Why not go downtownand see “Videodrome”?Sunday at 2:30: An additional showing of Reds.And at 8:00, romantic intrigue, as keenly and in¬telligently observed by Eric Rohmer in his humancomedy, The Aviator’s Wife.All shows in Cobb Hall, 5811 S.Ellis. Separate admission is $2 00.For more information, call our 24-hour filmline: 962-8575.DOC FILMS 172—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALWalsh, 1951} Thurs Feb 24 at 8.30.War* ;The University of Chicago Collegium Mu-sicum wifi give a concert oi Music =nHaly: 1400 Under the direction ofMary Springfels, they will performHegel’s Concept of Modernity” Lec¬ture by Juergen Habermas on Mon21 Feb at 8 in Harris 107, Northwes¬tern, Evanston. Cosponsored by theGoethe Institute, 329-0915. Free.Writers in Performance Series AuthorsDennis Brutus, Leon Forrest, JamesAlan McPherson, and Derek Walcottread excerpts from their work. MonFeb 21 at 8. Tickets $4. GoodmanStuoto Theatre, 200 S, OofumtHiS443*3800 ^ — H " H MPWI■.ads (Warren Beatty, 1981) Beattyrelates the love story of Americanactivists John Reed and LouiseBryant (played by Beatty and DianeKeaton, respectively) in the bohemi¬an-artistic-leftist subculture of Wil¬sonian America. The film and storymove eventually to Bolshevik Rus¬sia, where Reed died and is buried in the Kremlin. It is surprising that suchan endeavor could come out of Hol¬lywood, but it did, and the result isan historically accurate, and evenartistically satisfying epic. The lovestory and political story are success¬fully intertwined, highlighting thedual dynamic in both Bryant's andReed's lives. And in contrast to Hol¬lywood’s wonder boy Steven Speil-berg, Beatty's film is thematicallyintegrated and artistically consis¬tent. Characters develop. Symbolsare feuoweo throughout the narra¬tive. tmagts are recalled and e*pand'-c* upon. In a word, Rec“Ugh.. * despite being over threehours long. Some concessions havebeen made to popular taste and con¬ceptions (or misconceptdistortions are far outweighedby the fact that an igrponaM: perioo 'or' our history hasbeen made accessible to the Ameri¬can moviegoer. And American Com¬munists are presented as real, mul¬tifaceted, attragflve human beings.Tonicht at 6:1# and 10:15 and Sun Feb 20 at 2:30. Doc. $2. -VMThe Wizard of Oz (1939) If you grew upin a foreign country or withou| a TVset, you may never have seek, thismovie, in which case you must ^e itnow. And even if you did spend <^ieafternoon every year in Oz, imworth seeing again with a Nev&,Adult Perspective. In any case, the?good witch is still the most beautifulwoman on earth, the thrills are stillchilling, and curvaceous Judy Gar¬land does a pretty good job as anunder-ten-year-old. Sat Feb 19 at7:15; Sun Feb 20 at 2:30. LSF $2.—AAMy Man Godfrey (Gregory LaCava,1936) Although it does deal (and notall that lightly) with the issues ofclass-consciousness, social-climbing,and self-absorption inherent in anincreasingly capitalist-orientedworld, My Man Godfrey is above alla memorably funny film. It featuresCarole Lombard (the dumb blonde)as a young, spoiled socialite who ac¬quires William Powell (the thin man)on a scavenger hunt. She decides totake him home, determined to makethe lowly bum into her “protege” asa way of proving her superiority torivalrous family members. The re¬sult is a well-timed, evenly pacedfilm combining humor (both innocent¬ly stupid and cynically dry) and gen¬uinely-felt emotion. It sounds cliche,but it probably rates higher thanTop Hat on my list of favorite (sound)comedies, even without dancing. To¬morrow at 9:30. LSF $2. — LMThe Aviator’s Wife (Eric Rohmer. 1980)Sun Feb 20 at 8. Doc. $2.The Charlie Chaplin Revue (A Dog s Life.Shoulder Arms, and The Pilgrim, fol¬lowed by a talk by Professor Gerald Mast.) The main question is: who willbe funnier, Charlie or Gerry? (It isacceptable to call him “Gerry" be¬cause people in the theater worldare known by their first names. EvenSir Laurence Olivier is called“Larry.”) The program consists ofthree short films, calling attention toCharlie’s (not to mention Gerry's)k awareness of an extensive use of\the dreaded Rule Of Three. I haven tkeen the movies, but I can guaranteet^|t they are filled with things thatmoke (that's a definition of film, bythe Way), and they are probablyalso r^Jed with religious and politi¬cal significances that any well-trained eke (or member of Introduc¬tion To Ciflj?ma Part I) can find. If youcan’t find %iem, you can be sureGerry will, soL mark this day on yourcalendar: everf^f you don’t like Cha¬plin, I’m sure Qtory will put on quitea show, providing a marvelous pre¬view of this spring s Good Woman OfSzechuan. Mon Feb 21 at 8. Doc.$1.50. -TSCDThe Wrong Man (Alfred Hitchcock,1957) Tues Feb 22 at 8. Doc. $2.Shampoo (Hal Ashby. 1975) The sameold problem. You wake up in themiddle of the night in bed with some¬one, and realize that youposed to be sleeping withelse, so you rush out to yourcycle and hurry over to thebed. Happens all the time.Well, me neither, but it does forren Beatty, portraying a not unauto-biographical stud hairdresser in thehalcyon days of 1968 Lots of sexand laffs, but he pays for it, sort of,in the end with some light soul-searching. Julie Christie and GoldieHawn join with Warren in this enter¬ taining counterpoint to Reds. WedFeb 23 at 8. Doc $2. — VMThe General (Buster Keaton. 1926)Mack Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, andBuster Keaton form the Holy Trinityof silent film comedy (aha! the Ruleof Three again!) This is not the Kea¬ton film in which Buster gets chasedby hundreds of marriage-mindedmadwomen, nor is it the film in whichhe falls asleep at the movie projec¬tor only to awaken and find himselfpart of the movie. I haven't seen thisyet, so I can only tell you that this isthe film in which Buster plays some¬one named Johnny Gray. However. Ihave heard (and I'm not telling whotold) that this is probably Keaton’sgreatest film and is the Keaton filmto see if you've never seen one Be¬sides. Professor Gerald Mast likes it(that's “Gerry” to all you theaterfolk). Those three reasons areenough for me. so you can be sure I IIbe there. Wed Feb 23 at 8:30 LSF$2. —LMBob. Carol. Ted. and Alice (Paul Ma-zursky. 1969) Thur Feb 24 at 7:30IHTP. $2.Double Suicide (Masahiro Shinoda.1969) Thurs Feb 24 at 8. Doc $2Captain Horatio Hornblower (Raoulvocal and instrumental music by An-tonius Zachara de Teramo, Matteocontinued on page 4Grey City Journal 2/18/83Staff: John Andrew, Abigail Asher, Nina Bermaffi, Curtis Black, Pat Can¬non, John Conlon, Steven Diamond, Keith Fleming. Steve Haydon, SarahHerndon, Michael Honigsberg, Richard Mye, Kathy Kelly, LorraineKenny, Bruce King, Madeleine Levin, Shavyfi Magee, Marla Martin, Rich¬ard Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Movie, Pat O’Connell, Paul O’Donnell. MaddyPaxman, Sharon Peshkin, John Probes, 4bby Scher, Rachel Shtier. Cas¬sandra Smithies, Susan Subak, Beth Suffer.Fiction and Poetry Coordinator Judith gilverstein.Editorial Board: Stephanie Bacon, Leah Mayes, Vince Michael, Ken Wis-soker.Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Be^h Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—3i Mictwtt* Ston*. "They Cannot Root” at tha Hyde Park Art Contarcontinued from page 3de Perugia, Antonellus de Caserta,instrumental music from the FaenzaCodex, and more. Fri Feb 18 at 8 inBond Chapel. Free.Henry Cowell, Carl Ruggies, CharlesIves: three eccentric American com¬posers who, in the 1920’s and ’30’s,strove to establish a radical newspirit in musical composition. TheUniversity of Chicago New Music En¬semble will pay tribute to theseearly twentieth century masterswith a concert of American music.Sun Feb 20 at 8 in Goodspeed RecitalHall. Free.Tenor Joel Ginsberg will give a concertof music of Schumann, Purceli,Vaughn-Williams, Lalo and Donaudyas part of the University of Chicago Department of Music’s NoontimeConcert Series. Mr. Ginsberg will beassisted by Martin Schoenhals,piano. Thurs Feb 24 at 12:15 pm inGoodspeed Recital Hall. Free.American New Music Ensemble Direct¬ed by Peter Gena, the concert fea¬tures the work of contemporary com¬poser, Lukas Foss. Lukas Foss, IvarMikhashoff, and Lisa Vasta are spe¬cial guest artists. Fri Feb 18 at 8:15.Arts Club of Chicago, 109 E. Ontario.263-4161.Chicago Chamber Orchestra DieterKober directs composer Ada BelleMarcus in her composition "Tex¬tures”. Pieces by Ramea, Schubert,and Haydn are also featured. SunFeb 20 at 4. Free. Chicago Public Li¬brary Culturual Center, 78 E. Wash¬ ington. 922-5570.Music of the Baroque A 65-member Ba¬roque ensemble, directed by ThomasWickman; Elliot Golub, Concertmas-ter, presents Bach's "The PassionAccording to St. John". Sun Feb 20at 3. Tickets $8.50. United Church ofHyde Park, 1448 E. 53rd.461-9541.ARTTom Jaremba Performance. Tonight at8 at Midway Studios, 6016 Ingle-side. 753-4821. $2.50.Jeff Wall Three perfectly contingent si-gifiers and one signified. Don't turnthe page and send no money; eitherway they'll soon strike us like a treefalling in an unpopulated forest.Today and tomorrow, 10-4 and Sun,noon-4 at ttfe Renaissance Society,4th floor Cobb. 962-8670. Free —DMPoetry on the Wind Closes Sun at theSmart Gallery, 5550 Greenwood<not University; sorry). Today andtomorrow, 10-4; Sun, noon-4.753-2123. Free.The Anti-Alan G. Artner and people ofhis ilk show. Here, two poles of thesame relation. At one end, the Chica¬go artists who try to be 'anti-main-stream’ in spite of the by now obvi¬ous fact that this combination ofstyles is typical of Chicago art. Atthe other, observers like the Tri¬bune's Artner who put down the bestmany have to offer (Fri, 2/4). Lockedin continual other- (and thus self-) af¬firming struggle, not unlike the rela¬tion depicted in "They Cannot Rest"(Michelle Stone), in which two‘lovers' tangle in a fashion unsatis¬fying to both. One might elaborate on the analogy; but it's maybe bet¬ter to simply thank the Trib foravoiding confusion by printing “ArtCritic" below the byline and see theshow during the last two days be¬fore it closes. Today and tomorrow,11-5 at the Hyde Park Art Center,1701 E 53rd. 324-5520. Free — DMphoto/transformation Works by sevengraduate students in photographyat the School of the Art Institute.Opens tonight, 4:30-6 in the SAICGallery, Columbus and Jackson.Through 12 Mar: Mon-Wed, Fri &Sat, 10:30-4:30; Thurs, 10:30-7:30;Sun, noon-4:30 . 443-3710. Free.Looking at Women Worthy overview ofcontemporary representations ofwomen in painting and photo¬graphy. Through 28 Feb at Artemis¬ia Gallery, 9 W Hubbard. Tue-Sat,11-5. 751-2016. Free.Art of the Avant-Garde in Russia Through13 Mar at the Museum of Contem¬porary Art, 237 E Ontario. Tue-Sat,10-5; Sun, noon-5. 280-2660. $2 ex¬cept Tue, free.Photographers Invite Photographers”Group show curated by Robert Hein-ecken and Joyce Neimanas. Openstonight, 5-7 at NAME Gallery, 9 WHubbard. Through 2 April: Tue-Sat,11-5. 467-6550. Free.The Black Lung, "1000 Shades of Lip¬stick", and ."Beauty Mark" Perfor¬mance pieces by Sharon Evans. To¬morrow and Sunday at 8 at NAME;info above. $4.DANCERadis Dance Strata The premiere ofthree new pieces by choreographerJackie Radis, among other works.Fri Feb 18 and Sat Feb 19 at 8:30. Tickets $7.50/6/3. MoMing Danceand Arts Center, 1034 W. Barry.472-9894.THEATERTwo one-acts: The Autobiography ofEdvard Munch by Campbell McGrathand Reading In The Dsrk by KeithFleming. These two student-writtenplays are about men, women, beer,and television, and men, women,skeletons, and sex. Sounds like goodclean fun to me. I’ll be there everyperformance, so you should bethere, too. The $2.50 admission goesto two worthy causes — ConcreteGothic Theater and Student Activi¬ties. Need any more reasons to go?Call and ask at the Youth SubcultureDesk. The plays are tonight and to¬morrow night at 8 in the first floorReynolds Club theater. — TSCDAntigone The new translation by DavidGreene and Wendy O'Flaherty of So¬phocles’ tragedy will be directed byTimur Djordjadze. Opens Thurs Feb24 at 8. Previews Sat Feb 19 at 8,Sun Feb 20 at 7:30, Tues Feb 22 andWed Feb 23 at 8. Preview tickets $6Court Theatre, 5706 University.962-7005.Jungle Coup A radio reporter and hissound man broadcast an imaginerywar alone in the jungle. Written byRichard Nelson, directed by DavidChambers. Opens Fri Feb 18 at 8.Tickets $10. Goodman Theatre Stu¬dio, 200 S. Columbus. 443-3800.Playboy of the Western World Writtenby John Millington Synge, directedby James O’Reilly. Opens Thurs Feb24 at 8. Tickets $8. Body PoliticTheatre, 2261 N. Lincoln Ave.871-3000.THE COMMUTING STUDENTS ASSOCIATIONpresents an informal discussion withELIZABETH HOLTZMANCommuter Center District Attorney, Brooklyn, New York Tuesday, Feb. 22, 11:30amGates-Blake 1 Former Congresswoman Food will be servedGUADALAJARASUMMERSCHOOLUniversity 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) 626-4729 Sophocles’ANTIGONE...in a new translation byDavid Grene & Wendy O’FlahertyFebruary 24-March 20Low-priced Previews February 19-24753-4472Visa/MC/AmExDining Discounts with Mallory's Restaurant. 241-5600COURT^THEATRE(.Jniversih of Chicago 5535 S. Ellis Avenue CONCEPT AUDIO3410 N. Sheffield (at Clark St.)528-5553Chicagoland's used & closeout leader has more equip¬ment, more deeds & larger trade-in allowances than anyother store! 40% to 50% off retail is normal everyday pric¬ing at Concept Audio. We have complete home systemsfrom $100 to $200, $300 We have color TV's, all sizesfrom $129. We have a large selection of used & new carstereos & we do custom installations: our equipment orynurs we have a complete service dept We repair allmakes and models home stereo, car stereo, and TV. OpenM & Th 12-8pm; T, W, F 12-6pm, Sat 10-5 Master, Visa,checks & layaways ok. This week's specials include.Low Reduced Prices on New & Used CarStereo’s Car Speakers, EQ...ET. HomeStereo Components Winter ClearanceSale.RECEIVERS— New Scott 375R 80/chan-nel; $279. Trans Audio 7070; $119. TransAudio; 6400 $109. New B.S.R. RX-100;$159. New B.S.R. RX-300; $199.SPEAKERS— (Priced Per Pair) AcousticPhase; $59. B.I.C. Venturi Formula 4; $139.J.B.t. Lancer 44; $129. New B.S.R. 103;$129. New Panalox 2435 $99. TURN¬TABLES— 2 Technics SL-1800 (DiscoTables); $199/Pair. B.S.R. Quanta + 10;$99. Dual 1215 or 1218; $59. Sansui SR-212. CASSETTES— Pioneer CTF-9000;$189. Sharp RT-20 Digital; $89. Teac 350;$69. Teac A-103; $79. Aiwa-6600; $209.MISC— Hitachi Tuner + Ini 60/Channel;$299. Technics SU-21; $99. B.S.R. SpecialEQ. EX-100 New; $179. Pioneer ReverbSA-202W; $79.4—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALG.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTtl. *474335Lob on pramiiM to* lot) w«ici - iromesroptocod. tonaoa duplicated and pr*kcriptiont tillod. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustana Lutheran ChurchuWrr 5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.sU 6:30 o.m. — Sermon & Eucharist9:30 o.m. — Sunday School 0 Adult Forum:Nn “Luther”uA 10:45 o.m. *— Sermon 0 EucharistY 6:00 p.m. — Campus Ministry Supper ($2/person)★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★THE ACADEMY:It's graduates are among the leadersin Government, the Military and Industry.THE TRADITION;One hundred years of the finest schoolturning out the finest young men.THE CODE;No cadet will cheat, steal ordishonor the school.THE GOAL;To teach Honor, Integrity, Discipline.tiic TRUTH8■ ■ a anii a aaayp a aaiit mine ill A LIE■ a unnw bbbbmiThere is one cadetabout to expose the system....and there is a risk.i f‘ ;'*• • ..... '. *♦ * I\ i wfPARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A HERB JAFFEGABR1EL KATZKA PRODUCTlON-A FRANC RODDAM FILMTHE LORDS OF DISCIPLINE • DAVID KEITH ROBERT PROSKY-G.D. SPRADLIN• MUSIC BY HOWARD BLAKE-BASED UPON THE NOVEL BY W CONROYSCREENPLAY BY THOMAS POPE AND LLOYD EONVILt IE ■ PRODUCED BY HERB JAFFE AND GABRIEL. KATZKA- DIRECTED BY FRANC RODOAM^srin «EADTHE BANTAM BOOK A mRA^XJNT PICTUREXJ ...... I, ^Opens February 18th at a theatre near you. KIMBARK LIQUORS& WINE SHOPPEITALIAN WINEFESTIVAL(Seldom sold out of Italy)REDS1975 Brunello di MonTalcino(Poggio Alle Mura)One of the great growths produced from thenoble Brunello grape in picturesque Mon-talcino Austere while young, superb witha9e $13.69Sale Priced1977 Amarone ReciotoDellaValpolicella (Anselmi)Wine of great depth and grace, soft fruitcharacter$9.99Sale Priced1979 Chianti ClassicoRiserva(LeBocce)It s been a long time since a great chianti hasreached the American wine marketLeBocce has proven that chianti does nothave to be in a wicker basket to sell.$7.991981 Chianti, EstateBottled (Cignano)Fine red chianti wine produced and bottledby Giovanni Bianchi.$4.591979 Cabernet Sauvignon(La Fornarina)A dry red wine with a distinct vinous andherbaceous perfume and well-rounded bodyand flavour.$6.59WHITESPinot Grigio Di Annone(La Fornarina)A dry white wine. with an unmistakableethereal perfume and a slight hint of Acacia/lowers’ delicately velvety flavour.$5.091981 Sauvignon Blanc,Collio (La Fornarina)A dry white wine that goes especially wellwith soups souffles, vegetable pies and eggdishes$6.591980 Vernaccia di SanGimignano(Pietraserena)Produced and bottled by Bruno Arrigoni Awine of extraordinary finesse, fast becomingone of the most popular wines importedfrom Italy.$5.09Tocai Di Lison(La Fornarina)Estate bottled A dry white wine with adelicate scent of peach leaves and anagreeably bitterish taste$5.09Soave Classico Superiore(Anselmi)A dry, slightly nut-like aftertaste, made fromgrapes grown in the histoncal hilly area ofSoaue and Monte forte$4.09BRING IN AD 1Coupon Special(One Day Only)10% OFF ALL WINES2/18 83 onlyIn Kimbark Plaza1214 East 53rd st.493-3355We accept Visa/MC, checksHOURS: SUN. 12 to 12 MON-THU'iS Sam to 1 amFRI-SA T Sam to 2rpnTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1983—51621Open Now, through February 28, all HairPerformers Perms will be50% OFFReg. $30.00 - $60.00NOW $15.00 - $30.00Hair Shaping and Styling NOT includedin Perm prices.performedEAST!ra' ^? Days A Week!©The Hair Performers, 1983.permsaleWhat sets a Hair PerformersPerm from the rest? Quality. AHair Per formers Perm isstronger, healthier, and longerlasting. It's thick, shiny andnatural looking. And, it adds thecontrol and support you'vealways wanted but neverthought you could have. Let thePerm Professionals design theperm style that's just for you.We Don't Promise A GreatPerm. We Guarantee It! DOZENBAGELS FREE!SAVf 1.7*; WITH THE PURCHASE of1 lb. orMOREofLOXi while quantities last.j SUNDAY, FEB. 20, 1983• MORRY'S DELI5500 S. CORNELL PRESSES up to 25x38...Fast print to 22x28The Southsides largest andmost complete print shopOffset & LetterpressLAYOUT & ARTPHOTO COMPOSITIONOver 100 typestyles forbrochures, books, ad books- all your printing needsComplete Bindery includesgang stitching, perfectbinding, plastic binding, diecutting, embossing, hotstamping, eyeletting, tinningBANKERSPRINTHHU 7-3142 UNIONLABEL5832 So. GreenBRAND Used desks,chairs, files,and sofas8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111EQUIPMENT Open Daily 8:30-5Sat. 9-2— " > - ' ■ ■■■■—H mmm —Hickory-smokedChickeni mmmMEET ME AT 6:00 AT THE FROG & PEACH—A good, inexpensive dinner ON campus!THE FROG & PEACHserves dinner until 8:00 p.m., Monday thru SaturdayALL ENTREES PREPARED WITH FRESH INGREDIENTS(IdaNoyes)6—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALby Stefan TanakaIn recent years the American image ofJapan has changed from the land of tran¬sistors to an economic giant abundant inToyotas, Datsuns, and Sonys, but devoidof oranges and beef. While politicians andstatesmen continue to banter about newproblems based on old themes, film — fromthe old classics by Ozu and Kurosawa tomodern experimental expressions — hasbeen able to transcend national bounda¬ries by depicting issues common to all so¬cieties.The two-part film program, “JapaneseExperimental Film 1960-1980,” sponsoredby the Center for Far Eastern Studies, pro¬vides us with a different image of Japanand Japanese cinema. This program oftwenty films rarely seen outside of Japanhas been designed to introduce the richand varied field of contemporary Japa¬nese cinema. In these films, which rangefrom early-1 960s surrealism toearly-1980s technodazzle, many of the re¬cent concerns and trends of a few ofJapan’s leading artists are exhibited.The program was selected from about2000 films by Donald Richie in cooperationwith Image Forum, Tokyo’s main archivefor experimental Japanese film. This ex¬hibition has been organized and is circulat¬ed by The American Federation of Art FilmProgram and supported by a grant fromthe Japan-United States Friendship Com¬mission.Richie, along with Image Forum’s found¬er and director, Katsue Tomiyama. hasbeen credited with playing a crucial role inthe development of experimental cinemain Japan. Richie and Tomiyama activelysupported the making and viewing of Jap¬anese experimental film throughout the1960s and 1970s. The first western exper¬imental films seen by the Japanese werethose Richie made in America after WorldWar II. Richie also arranged for the firstJapanese screenings of works by Ameri¬can avant-garde filmmakers KennethAnger, Stan Brakhage, Bruce Conner, andBruce Baillie, events which had a substan¬tial effect on Japanese experimental film¬makers.In 1960, a number of Japanese artists —among them the poet Shuntaro Tanikawa,and photographer Eiko Hosoe — beganmaking films. Like their counterparts inEurope and America, Japanese painters,poets, photographers, and playwrights Heliography, Hiroshi Yamazakiviewed film as an exciting new adjunct totheir work in more traditional media. Thefilms produced by the Japanese artists,however, are on the whole more sugges¬tive than those of their western col¬leagues; the conclusion, for example, isoften left open so that the audience is notconfined to one interpretation.Richie has stated that these films areconcerned primarily with aesthetic valueswhich reflect the poetic tradition of Japa¬nese culture rather than contemporary po¬litical issues. Certainly one cannot avoidthe importance of aesthetics in these films.However, social issues are not overlooked,but are incorporated; Eiko Hosoe’s Naveland A-Bomb and Nobuhiro Aihara’sShelter are concerned with the ravages ofwar, while Sakumi Hagiwara's Mist, Hi-deaki Mori’s Born to Run, and ShuntaroTanikawa and Toru Takemitsu’s X com¬ ment on the conflict between (or coexis¬tence of) modern and traditional society.In Hagiwara's Mist, the single scene ofclouds slowly lifting to reveal distantmountains, evokes the kind of serene, nat¬ural image common in traditional Japa¬nese painting. However, these aestheticvalues are severely altered, if not de¬stroyed, by the accompanying music — Ja-panified “concrete.” In Tanikawa and Ta-kemitsu's X a man condemns the world bymarking everything with an X, and ultima¬tely marks himself. One can argue that ifeverything is condemned, then nothing is:the marking loses its significance as ameans of social criticism, and the film pres¬ents, more simply, an aesthetic. Yet onecan also see this act as an inability toescape from the very world that one hascondemned; an attempt to escape from thedelimitations of society has ultimately failed, ending in submission.In each of these films, as well as others inthe series, a strong aesthetic impulse is ac¬companied by a contrasting deeper con¬cern on the part of the filmmaker. PerhapsRichie is right when he states that the aes¬thetics subvert the social statement; buteven if true, this in itself is instructiveabout Japanese culture, for politicalitydoes not always assume an overtly conten¬tious posture in Japan. No matter whichview one takes of this series, it providesan important complement to the more pop¬ular Japanese commercial films as well asto our understanding of Japanese soci¬ety.The film program will be shown at the In¬ternational House Auditorium. Part I (94minutes) will be shown on Monday, Febru¬ary 21 at 8 pm and Part II (90 minutes) onFebruary 23 at 8 pm. Admission is free.MERCURIAL MEPHISTOby Shawn MageeOne of the most coveted roles in the Ger¬man-speaking stage is that of Mephisto-pheles, the diabolical “fallen angel” ofGoethe’s Faust', an inspiring interpretationof the character has often brought an actorfame and adulation. Mephisto, winner ofthe 1982 Academy Award for Best ForeignFilm, is the story of an actor obsessed withthe success such a role could bring, andhow he systematically subordinates ev¬erything, including love and self-esteem,to this obsession.Mephisto, a Hungarian/West German co¬production directed by Istvan Szabo, isbased on the novel of the same name writ¬ten by Klaus Mann. Mann’s Mephisto is arather diaphanous roman a clef centeringaround the career of Gustav Gruendgens,perhaps best known outside of Germanyfor his portrayal of the gangster boss inFritz Lang’s M, but in Germany known pri¬marily as a stage actor. Although Mannclaimed that Mephisto was not intended asa roman a clef — he describes it as the de¬piction of “a symbolic type, not a portraitof this person or that one” — there can beno argument that the character HendrikHoefgen is indeed Gustav Gruendgens,who was Mann’s brother-in-law (divorcedfrom Erika Mann in 1929) and allegedformer lover. In fact, the resemblance be¬tween Hoefgen and Gruendgens is so closethat publication of Mann's manuscript,written in exile in 1936, was prohibited bythe federal courts of Germany as recentlyas 1980 as a result of a suit brought byGruendgen’s heirs. Only after thousandsof pirated copies printed illegally inFrance flooded Germany, was it allowed tobe published.The story takes place in Germany in theyears proceeding and immediately follow¬ing one of the most pivotal points in twen¬ tieth century history, January 30, 1933(the day of Hitler’s rise to power). It chron¬icles the ascension of the actor HendrikHoefgen (Klaus-Maria Brandauer) fromprovincial portrayals in French farces tocoveted roles such as Hamlet and Mephis-topheles, a rise almost as meteoric — andas ruthless — as the one it obviously paral¬lels. As an actor, Hoefgen has cultivatedthe skill of manipulating an audience; as aman, he uses this skill with consumategrace — humiliating, cajoling, or flatteringas the situation demands, anyone whomight further or stand in the way of his ca¬reer.It is evident that Klaus Mann's novel isextremely thin and lacks the emotionaland intellectual rigor associated with thework of his father, Thomas Mann, whoseown novel Doktor Faustus depicts a similarFaustian bargain. Yet it is precisely thissense of literary inadequacy that first pi¬qued director Szabo’s interest in Mephis¬to. He maintains that although the novel’scharacters are somewhat one-dimensional,the structure still provides the basis for “apowerful film”, and adds that if the novelwere really good, he would not considercreating a film version, feeling that thework had already found its “authentic”form.Szabo’s cinematic interpretation, how¬ever, diverges from Mann’s novel in sev¬eral significant ways. In both works, Hoef¬gen keeps an exotic black “dancer”,Juliette, as his mistress before, during,and after an unsuccessful marriage. In thefilm, Juliette seems to have genuine affec¬tion for Hoefgen; in the novel PrincessTebab (Mann often refers to her under her “professional” name) is filled with nothingbut contempt for Hendrik; indeed, the coreof their relationship revolves aroundHoefgen’s wish to be denigrated andabused, both verbally and physically. In arecent interview, Szabo explains why hedropped this aspect from his film. “I didn'twant to give people in the audience thechance to say, ‘this man is collaboratingwith the Nazi’s because he's a pervert anda fetishist, / could not collaborate with theNazi’s. . .’ ” In deleting this quirk in Hoef-gen's personality in the name of vieweridentification with the protagonist, how¬ever, Szabo has also removed anothermore essential aspect of Hendrik Hoefgen— his awareness of his sins and his needfor repentance. The self-flagellation (Prin¬cess Tebab’s red lather whip, which recursthroughout the novel as a leitmotiv, is agift from Hendrik himself) is a constant re¬minder that Hoefgen is cognizant not onlyof the evil inherent in his actions, but alsoof the fact that he must ultimately performsome act of contrition. This aspect is entire¬ly missing from the film.After it is clear that Hoefgen's ascen¬dency to increasingly elite spheres is jeo¬pardized by his “racially impure” rela¬tionship with his “Black Venus”, Hoefgenrealizes that the relationship must come toan end. In the film, the necessity of this ter¬mination is announced by Hoefgen's om¬nipotent benefactor (a character modelledafter Hermann Goering) with Hoefgen,rather reluctantly, acquiescing. In thenovel, however, it is Hoefgen himself whogoes to the General to ask that PrincessTebab be escorted by the Gestapo fromBerlin. The difference, of course, is be¬ tween passive and active, between beingsimply swept along, and being a cold andcalculating opportunist. In eradicating thisscornful “Black Venus”, Hoefgen jettisonswhat remains of his conscience selling notonly his own soul, but squandering that ofanother human being. Szabo's insistenceon viewer identification and the resultantevisceration of the Hoefgen character robsthe film of the electricity associated withsuch an absolute figure; reducing HendrikHoefgen to a wishy-washy sort of Every¬man necessarily prevents his being trulymephistophelian.This mollification of the main character,however, does not prevent an excellentperformance by Klaus-Maria Brandauer,the man who portrays him. Brandauer isable to perfectly capture Hoefgen's mer¬curial nature — maniacal one moment, mel¬ancholy the next — all the while maintain¬ing the cohesiveness of a singlepersonality, rather than a series of im¬pressive but unrelated vignettes.The visual highpoint of the film is itsfinal sequence, created by Szabo himself.The General (true to Mann's insistence thatthe characters are types, he is never re¬ferred to as Goering) has invited Hoefgento accompany him in a private nocturnal in¬spection of the Olympic Stadium beingcreated for the 1936 Games. At the Gener¬al's urging, Hendrik rather timidly ven¬tures out into the center of the arena, fol¬lowed by a single shaft of light, and is thenbombarded by floodlights convergingfrom all directions. As Hendrik, now afrightened and pitiful figure, tries toescape the unrelenting glare, the intensesheaths of light anticipate his every move.Thus Hendrik Hoefgen finds himself alonein the ultimate playhouse, cowering atcenter stage, blinded by the very spot¬lights for which he sold his soul.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—7THE TRIAL1. The Situation.Five hundred or so and Isaw a virgin fall tonighta thing of beauty passedbut newly beautiful in adifferent perspective, inits present condition:like the folding of a townin Illinois by fat, brownfloodwaters, a town in brown,,a Browntown- an old outdoorshopping mall fadingfast from Old Bridge, N.J.—sad and pretty. Pretty sadI saw her insides ooze outfrom her cunt like that. Thatcunt. My favorite murder beginswith two boys, an old lady, anda broomstick in the farmlands ofsouthern N.J. and ends withthe disgusted coroner whopulled the broomstick outfrom up her and throughher shoulder.2. Morality Questions.Am I dreaming? Was therea purity in 1953 slid awaylike a slug leaving stickumto catch rare unfortunateslike me? Will Betty Jo gosteady with me? Myfrustrations make me work; myhaircut makes me doo wop infour part harmony with threeother Jewish guys on our wayinto Brooklyn to buy pot froman apartment door. Spike’s dadtold me the greaserswere the wimps in thosedays, I told him thingshaven't changed much.Is purity being nothing? —unlabeled, unchallenged, bare—! have seen her naked, there’snothing there to keep me beatingmyself for this long. Chicagois boring. This is the realquestion. Who died and madeyou chief of aesthetics? Iwish it was 1953, Iwas in Korea and shotand killed, and givena medal, something that says: ‘I lived andfor more than buying anice wardrobe’. Whyi •do you congratulate yourself whenyou end up as an object of disgust?3.The Answers.Don’t trust anyone whowas raped by their father, amale bee who just got laid, ora drunk with compliments.Don’t keep driving a caruntil its drive-shaft dropsand if that happens don’tkeep giving it gas.What is given in honestyis taken in greed; so watchyour aiss/ Don’t trade abrand new G.l. Joe marine suitfor only the helmet and bootsof a deep sea diver outfit. Don’ttrade with a kid with fat parents.Don’t look, in nothingthere is nothing:purity is in the mind,honesty is too much tohope for.Larry Cohen8—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 198&-THE GREY CITY JOURNALmwmmDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses5234 S. 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IL 60201 ?566 N. Clark St., Chicago, IL 606)4(above Countv Seat)864-4441 880-54004THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—9GET YOUR CAREER OFFTO A FLYING STARTIt takes four years to get a college degree How Iona will ittake you to get a good job?If you haven't settled on a company or corporation yet, whynot get your executive career off to a flying start as a plot ornavigator in the United States Air Force? It's the finest flight pro¬gram m the world, the pay is excellent, and you'll enjoy theprestige that goes with the silver wings of an Air Force pilo* ornavigatorIt's one of the finest opportunities in the nation And a gredfpldce to gam executive experience with million dollar respon¬sibility. Find out today about the Air Force flight proqram Con¬tact Andy Stochmal536 S. Clark St. Rm 352Chicago, IL 60605(312) 663-1642A great way of lifePut the pastin yourfuture!Thoroughly reno\-ated apartments offer the convenienceof contemporary li\ing space combined witli all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural setting foraffordable elegance with dramatic views.—.Ail new kitchens and appliances — Community room— Wall - to - wall carpeting—Air conditioning— Optional indoor or outdoorparking Resident managerRound-the-clock securityLaundry facilities oneach floorStudios, One. Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One bedroom from 8480 — Two Bedroom from S660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643 1406>’L ■ ~~‘T I Tii am. xJl Ik(JOiridemmtjftoMse1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex, Inc. 5309 S. 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Universityin University Church Dining RoomCome try some ofour homestyle cookingSoups, salads, sandwiches,sunflower seed burgers,baked chicken, plus much more.Monday thru Friday11:30 am til 2:30 pm10—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALUNDERNEATH THE STRUCTUREThe two murals being compared in this ar¬ticle are “The Masque of Youth”, whichcovers the walls of the Third Floor Theatreof Ida Noyes Hall, and “Under City Stone”,which is painted under the viaduct at 55thStreet and the 1C tracks.by Sharon PeshkinAlthough there is a wealth of contrastswhich can be made between the twomurals “The Masque of Youth” and“Under City Stone”, the central differencelies in what can be deemed “the art of theprivileged few” and “the art of the op¬pressed many”. “The Masque of Youth” ispainted on the walls of a theatre in abuilding, access to which is limited to anelite — the people of the University of Chi¬cago. It celebrates the dedication of thebuilding it is in, Ida Noyes Hall — a tremen¬dous gift from a terribly rich man to an in¬stitution dedicated to wealth and educa¬tion. The Masque is, in essence, aglorification of wealth and youth. “UnderCity Stone” is painted under a viaduct, alocation not only open to the public, but aregular part of their daily surroundings.What the theatre is to Ida Noyes Hall, theviaduct is to the city, and it is those largerentities (the building and the city) whichare the reasons for the existence of eachof the murals. “Under City Stone” is, how¬ever, no celebration. It is a protest; a cryagainst the effect of the city upon the livesof those who must live “under” it.Whereas the Masque celebrates man's cre¬ation of the structures of his life, “UnderCity Stone” mourns the way the structurescreated crush the people; the Masqueparades through the buildings and land¬scapes of man's surroundings,.the peopleof the city must stoop beneath the imagesof war, technology and city squalor whichweigh down upon their walk of life.This core contrast is manifest in othermodes of analysis as well. In the differentpainting styles of the two murals it canbest be seen in the contrived appearanceof the Masque as opposed to the spontane¬ous feel of “Under City Stone”. The Mas¬que is a formal event with a clear begin¬ning and end, neat divisions between units(groups of participants) and deliberateposes which correspond to the role eachparticipant is playing in the masquerade— a staged event. The people in the “pro¬cession” of “Under City Stone” have nei¬ther a leader nor a terminal figure; theirwalk is timeless, seamless, beginningless and endless. The stances of the roles theyfill are not temporarily assumed for aclearly demarcated event, as in “The Mas¬que of Youth”. They are the parts theyplay forever in a script to which they havebeen condemned by the civilization underwhose endless, pointless dictum they runand squeal like so many tame rats on atreadmill. Unlike the Masque, which pro¬ceeds in a formal, organized fashion, thepeople of the city are “every one a lifealone'’, going about their business, caughton the same path but each with their ownpurpose and pace.Furthering this contrived/spontaneousdichotomy is the way in which the peoplehave been painted. The people of the Mas¬que are mostly young and all blemish-free,neatly painted in pleasing colors, andgreat attention has been given to detailsof dress and countenance so that each per¬son is presented to their best advantage. The people of the city are often ugly, oldor deformed, and although they have suf¬ficient details so that their ages, races andsocial positions are discernable, they havebeen drawn in a quick style which createsa kinship between them as the people ofthe city. And whereas in the Masque thedeliberate attention to presenting themany nationalities leaves the viewer withthe impression of fundamental samenessmasquerading (costumed), the fundamen¬tal differences among the people of thecity have been subsumed under the homo¬genizing effect of shared oppression.The Masque is presented for theviewers' approval, frozen in time upon thewall (there is little feel of momentum), setabove the viewers and smaller-than-life.The people of “Under City Stone” walk onthe same level as the ground upon whichthe real people of the city walk, and arelarger-than-life as though they stand for aggregates of people. By the way in whichthey lean forward and by the quickstrokes with which they have been paintedthey give the impression of momentum andfeel to the viewers as though they walkalong with them. “Under City Stone” is, inessence, a portrait of the viewers. Thus,whereas “The Masque of Youth" is a pag¬eant put on for the pleasure of the elite,whom the people gladly serve (the smilingpeasants bearing agricultural tools andthe fruits of their labor), “Under CityStone" is a statement of solidarity withthe people of the city and a protestagainst the elite whose wars the peoplemust fight, whose machines the peoplemust work, and under the stones of whosedecadent city the people must live. Theconjunction of these two murals is an ap¬propriate metaphor for the relationshipbetween the Hyde Park/Woodlawn com¬munity and The University of Chicago.by Bruce KingRandy Newman, a rock star with preten¬sions of social relevance, has graced thejaded world with yet another album. Onceagain, it's time for Randy, the world-weary cynic, to throw out a few bon mots,provide a chuckle for complacent Eas¬terners, and expose the essential vacuityof those who have come to his acidic atten¬tion. For this purpose, Newman has cast hisgaze to the west, to those silly, cocainesnorting, Mexican employing, fad con¬scious Californians. Well, sorry Randy, butthis is one Californian who's not laughing— or even finding cause for an empatheticchuckle.Trouble in Paradise is the title of RandyNewman's new album and his weightytopic is the casual self-deception and de¬struction which lurks behind the facade ofutopia — particularly the proposed uto¬pias of Florida, South Africa, and, the mostignominious offender of all, California.Calculatedly sly wit is Newman’s claim tofame (if not to musical excellence) — aform of satire which is apparent on thealbum’s opening track, “I Love L.A.” Whatbegins as a stereotypically Californiantale of cruising down the “Imperial High¬way,” convertible top down and Beach-boys on the radio, is abruptly transformedinto alleged social commentary by New¬man’s not-so-subtle satiric sledgehammer:Look at that mountainLook at those treesLook at that bum over there, manHe's down on his kneesWith one line and one line only, Newmanintends to expose the cruel contradictions of California. Unfortunately, one line justisn't enough.Throughout Trouble in Paradise, New¬man employs the sudden lyrical shocker asthe knife which is to cut away the previousmusical complacency and expose the illu¬sions behind the images of utopia. Theproblem with Newman's use of this strate¬gy is that it asks the listener to fill in thesatiric picture which Newman begins, butleaves incomplete. And, judging from thecalibre of his one-liners, Newman is askingthe listener to complete the picture withmedia-created misconceptions of Califor¬nia — Valley Girls, nouveau riche movieexecutives, lines of cocaine which extendthe length of the beach, and countlessother jokes promulgated by Johnny Car-son.California is not the only topic for whichNewman relies upon prefabricated imagesand conceptions. On the more explicitly po¬litical issues of apartheid in South Africaand the aftermath of Vietnam, Newman'sattitude is, in the former case, that preju¬dice is a difficult topic and, in the lattercase, that Vietnam was a damn shame.These are attitudes easy to echo, but theyoffer little in the way of insight, and do noteven provoke the beginnings of explor¬atory thought. Throughout, Trouble in Par¬adise offers ready-made image for criticalmeaning, evasion for understanding — thevery reversals Newman hopes to sati¬rize.My strongest reactions to this albumwere to the songs satirizing California.But, this article isn't meant as a defense ordeification of California. The Golden Stateoffers more than its share of satiric mate¬rial — particularly in the political mire of a state which comprises 10% of the nationalpopulation. In the last election, Californiaelected a new senator who criticized thePresident for fiscal liberality, elected anew governor because his opponent wasBlack, refused to pass a gun-control initia¬tive, and refused to pass a stringent en¬vironmental law. California, political andspiritual home of Ronald Reagan, showedits unthinking allegiance to the policies ofthe New Right. Surely, it's time for morethan another joke about cocaine or aboutthe Mexican “maid” of the L.A. executive.Randy Newman Surely, it's time for something more thanRandy Newman has the lyrical skill or wil¬lingness to offer. By avoiding political rea¬lities and relying upon a media-createdimage of drug-crazed sex on the beach.Newman displays not the hip. with-it atti¬tude he hopes for. but rather a tacit con¬servatism.Conservative is surely the most appro¬priate adjective for the musical elementsof Trouble in Paradise. Newman may in¬tend to satirize the lifestyles of SouthernCalifornia, but he has no geographicqualms about surrounding himself with themusical representatives of mainstreamL.A. Linsey Buckingham. Linda Ronstadt,Waddy Watchel, Christine McVie. and ahost of mellow others contribute to Trou¬ble in Paradise's “Californian." listlessand conservative musical accompaniment.A fitting epitaph for Trouble in Paradiseis provided by some recent words from theGo-Gos. a truly under-rated and more rep¬resentative 'California' band:and though I shouldn't be complain¬ingwhat's lacking here is entertainingwe re all looking for a good timebut what we get is empty rhymewhen everything's right but noth¬ing's fineit’s everything but partytimeThe Go-Gos know that there is no suchthing as a vacation, much less a utopia, butthey're smart enough not to wallow in self-pity or to offer pretensions of explana¬tion. They'd rather dance.Randy Newman? Gag me with a spoon.•LISTLESS«PRE-FAB •UTOPIAN •DRIVELTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—11GREY CITY BRUNCH 5537 KIMBARK 2E 12JO SUNDAY 2/20always brings to my attention).The worst of it is that the junk is only asmall part of what we deal with everyday. We also have extended argumentsabout what belongs to who. These argu¬ments lead us ridiculously into our ima¬gined past where he is convinced that itwas I who wanted the ironing board withthe broken legs; I on the contrary am cer¬tain that it was he who offered to carry ithome and fix it. so what the hell, whowould turn down an offer like that?I cannot escape it! The image is foreverimpressed on my brain! He is sitting on oneoverstuffed box viciously ripping at an¬other with his hands and teeth. He gnawsat the cord that's been wrapped twicearound then tears off a corner of the box.Then with a sudden BARK he bursts thebox. Multicolored scraps go flying andiacid on neighboring bicycle tires, “I GOTIT!” he roars. ‘‘Now YOU repair the cur¬tain!” That was the deal. We often makedeals like this. We are presented with adomestic task; one of us must do most ofthe work and that is finding what toolsand supplies we need.Sometimes I take everything in my room— my books, papers, clothes — and pack it.I do this late at night; I go to the 24 HourJewel and get the boxes, and then I pack itall, like I am moving out. He is usually fum¬bling around at the other end of the apart¬ ment when he hears my first screeches offrustration. He used to come running, butnow when he hears me he slowly emergesfrom the piles to stand casually at my doorwhile I throw the stuff into boxes. I usuallyam cursing “I can't stand this junk any¬more, I’m throwing it ail out.” He knowsthat I am not moving out, and that once Ihave boxed it all I will go to sleep on thebare mattress. In the morning I wake upand unpack, putting everything in a newplace. I am convinced that ORGANIZATIONis the trick. This little trick has sufficed formany months now. but I’m getting tired. Inave resorted to packing and unpackingmore than my room. I started here, butquickly included the kitchen, the livingroom and the bathroom — that is. everyroom but his. I pack and unpack the wholegoddam apartment and it helps, it reallydoes.He seems to understand me more andmore. He continues to go out and "casuallylook” on Saturdays while I have taken onthis new challenge: can I get everything inand out of boxes in one day? Not if he con¬tinues to bring home cracker cans andsocks.It is late on Friday night when I am takenby a fit, I begin to chant, "NO More, NoMore, No More.” I run barefoot to theJewel. I devise a strategy. I start in myroom then move to the kitchen. He ignores my chanting and hides away in his bed¬room, pretending to read. “OUT!” I yell asI throw the bag of socks out the window —I hear it land on a pile of junk in the back¬yard. Out follows the mops, the shelvingpaper, the dictionaries, we don’t need anydictionaries we have our own language.He understands when he hears me runningfrantically from one room to another, butoh no, he doesn’t understand, he rushes tothe window and grabs the dictionariesfrom my hands. “How DARE YOU?” saysthe king of junk.We live together in our castle of junk andunfortunately we have resorted to secretattacks on each other’s junk. Later thatweek, when he is gone, I throw out his carparts. He comes home and finds themstrewn around the backyard. Later, I findbooks — precious books that I haveclimbed through heaps of garbage to col¬lect, old books, books with beautiful pho¬tographs — carefully hidden betweenbags of outgoing garbage. ‘‘How darehe!” I think and take them back sneakily.Our relationship has gotten this way.What was once a caress to each other’ssenses is now an attack on each other’sjunk. There is no love. Our junk has comebetween us. We act like parents in a sec¬ond marriage with unwanted children;‘‘Your junk did this!” ‘‘Well YOUR junk didthat!” We argue about the virtues of ourjunk. It is a moral dilemma. Should he havethe right to rearrange my things to makeextra room *or his? He has more than I do,^though I'm sure he'd argue differently.Today I catch him bending over my stuffI throw socks at him. He returns a bootSoon we are throwing each other’s junk. Idon’t believe it, he’s throwing that dollthat I got at the rummage — look — theregoes her arm. this is it, I will k;ck in everyone of his boxes until i hear his mother schina crumbling, AHHHHHHH the sound ofit! But wait, was that my mother’s glass¬ware FURIOUS I’ll ravage everything,ohhh the JOY in it! But wait' he is a CHILD!Look at him go at my stuff; he's out of con¬trol. He keeps destroying and I can barelymake it to my Dedroom. That guy is crazy!I won t go out there until he stops. Just lis¬ten to the noise!It's quite. I open the door. There he is, inthe hall, standing on a chair and reaching,oh no, for one of the overstuffed boxes. Hebarely touches it and it rips down. Thething hits him like a steel case, chains popout, hubcaps zip like saucers through thegalaxy come up against unidentified fly¬ings boxes, “NOW LOOK WHAT YOU'VEDONE, WE NEVER TOUCH THOSE BOXES!THAT'S WHY WE KEEP THEM THERE!”Grab a coat, we head for the door. It’stime for a walk. Every couple takes thiswalk. It’s a long walk wherein they talkabout all the STUFF that's piled up in theirrelationship, stuff that they have kept.Some box and rebox some simply keepcollecting; some leave a note for the land¬lord, "It's all yours!” But what will WEdo? \Now that we are walking we think,‘‘Boy, we lived THERE a long time, a LONGLONG time. The more we walk, the morewe want to walk. We smell good restau¬rants that are always a block ahead. “Doyou have the checkbook?” he asks. “Yes,”I say. Let’s keep walking, yea, we canwalk all night, yea, but. did you. ’. ."What?”"Did you..”What?”"You know..”"Leave it?”"The key.”"Of course!” I exclaim, "It's time!”We check into a motel that is next to afine little rummage shop. The next morn¬ing we're up and over to the Jewel forboxes, which we leave in the lobby. Untilwe find a new place we spend a lot of ourtime in the rummage shop, where again hesatisfies his fetish for socks. The motelpeople complain about the junk that is ac¬cumulating in the corner by the rubberplant. We assure them that we will beleaving soon and vow to ourselves to holdoff scavenging until we find a place. Butwe both agree to buy one ironing boardthat has workable legs. It’s a little rustybut he vows to find a cover for it, so I don’thesitate at all.by Martha KinneyJunk JUNK JUNK I may as well be buriedin it if !’m going to live this kind of life. It’smy materialistic upbringing that throwsme into these late night conniptions. ! willbe reading or writing but the clothes at theend of the bed are in the way of my out¬stretched ;egs. the open window admits abreeze that knocks the extra candle ontothe floor, or I attempt to pul! a book from ashelf and a stack of useless papers spreadacross the desk, damnit no goddamn placeto mcve in this hole! What is this shit? Wholeft their socks in here? What is the news¬paper doing in the sink and who spilled thepencils on the couch?It’s been going on like this for awhile,but the apartment seems to be gettingworse. We have filled the living room socompietely that we can’t even see out thewindows. I am standing at the door I cansee we have four box springs, two tenspeeds, twenty-four rolis of shelvingpaper, thousands of books, fourteen pairsand one stray boot. I don’t know why hecollects those socks though, if reaiiy bugsme. You never know who’s been wearingthem and he never bothers tc wash them. Ihave asxed him many times to put them ina bag and take them out back, let the gar¬bage man have them. We have sixteenflowerpots — seven cracked, two severelychipped — two buckets full of sponges fourused mops. God knows what else we have.These are only the things that I can see.I don't dare even trying to go into thisroom. The apartment was once clean,empty, I even remember a day when wecould see all of the floors. When we movedin the rooms seemed large, the ceilingsseemed high, the hallway seemed long,but now. look at this place now, not evenroom to sit. We have stacked so manyboxes in the hall that it is dangerous to gofrom the kitchen to the living room. Someof those boxes are full of hubcaps andheavy metal car parts; we could get hurtjust living here!Well, we did do it, I must admit, it’s notas if the place acquired the junk on its own.It must be us. Every place we have livedhas been this way — spacious, comfort¬able, luxurious — for about three weeks. Iguess we have carried the stuff aroundwith us. Once in awhile one of us will getangry and throw something out. I havelate night fits where I try to pile every¬thing in one corner; if I can just get it allinto one corner and keep it there. I mustadmit, however that I have mostly exer¬cised these attacks on his stuff (a fact he12—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALThe practice ofDR. CARLTON R. RESNICKGeneral Dentistryhas moved to111 N.Wabash,Suite 2003,ChicagoTel. 372-2945equisilefaanadian¥-#r vv i*9l°9flm '1 s ve/u J° ai,e%£ >*>«Cr~hj:^<o/J '•4>c; *ji **<&, esNewsNo concensus reached at the Round Table discussionContinued from page oneWhite then considered the question of li¬miting knowledge. He said, ‘People don’tjust aquire knowledge, ever. No one justpicks up facts without any sense of social orpolitical purpose.” He cited the example ofa researcher who would investigate the cor¬relation between IQ and race. The only pur¬ pose of such a study. White said, would be togive credence to a social stereotype.‘‘There are human purposes which areimproper,” he said, ‘‘and to say that whatwe’re doing in pursuit of improper purposesis aquiring knowledge doesn’t justify it atall.”While White favored limits on certainGroup seeks to end abuse of lab animalsEvery second, three animals die in anAmerican laboratory, according to a leafletcirculated on campus by the U of C AnimalWelfare Group (UCAWG). The group seeksto end abuse of animals in research, or atleast to establish guidelines by which re¬searchers must conduct their work.At a meeting yesterday of the UCAWG,Robert Mole, Chicago coordinator for Mobi¬lization for Animals (MFA) spokes on thegoals and status of the MFA and its PrimateLaboratories Project.The four primary concerns of the group,according to UCAWG President MichaelPereira, are: 1) that unnecessary experi¬mental primate research that causes suffer¬ing to animals cease, 2) that the number ofanimals that are employed in continuing re¬search be minimized, 3) that the animalsthat continue to be subjected to experimen¬tation be housed and maintained under hu¬mane conditions, and 4) that scientistsstrive to develop alternative methods to theuse of animals in scientific research.Pereira added that the MFA is not ready tocondemn unilaterally all research at thistime, but demands reform along theselines.According to Pereira’s notes on Mole’stalk at the group’s meeting, Mole discussedthe part of the National Institutes of Health(NIH) in American research and the use ofanimals in laboratories. NIH, the notes read, funds most biomedical research em¬ploying research animals in the nation. NIH“is currently organized and completely ad¬ministered by researchers — an internally-regulated system in which projects can re¬ceive funding on the basis of tradition orfavoritism.”Mole pointed out tht the precedent-settingcase of a researcher convicted by the stateof Maryland for failing to provide adequateveterinary care for his experimental rhesusmonkeys, is an example of “abuse and neg-ligence toward laboratory ani¬mals... (which) goes unchecked in labsthroughout our country.” He blames the in¬sufficient concern for lab animals on thegeneral Western mentality that “all re¬search is good.”Issues brought up in a discussion follow¬ing Mole's talk included the rationale behindthe use of laboratory animals, the potentialuse of alternative subjects (instead of ani¬mals, such as cell tissue cultures and fertilechicken eggs) in scientific research, and an¬imal abuse in cosmetic research.On April 24, “World Day for LaboratoryAnimals,” the MFA will sponsor a nationalPrimate Laboratory Demonstration, to takeplace in four cities in the US, and in Europeand Australia. The midwest portion of thedemonstration will be held at the WisconsinRegional Primate Research Center in Ma¬dison.PRE-LAWMEETINGSfor all studentsinterested in LawLIFE AS ALAW STUDENTPanel Discussion by formerU.C. Undergraduates now inLaw Schools lTUESDAYFEBRUARY 224 P.M. • HARPER 130Sponsored by Office ofDean of Students in the College J knowledge, he felt that the individual re¬searcher should be the person responsible tomake the decision. Each researcher mustconstantly ask himself what his purposesare in an experiment.Landau, professor in the department ofmedicine and the College, told the audience,“I would put no breaks on the pursuit ofknowledge.” Landau is chairman of theClinical Investigation Committee of U of C.Such ethics review boards, he explained, be¬came necessary in response to public hostil¬ity towards research practices in the past.“Some (of these practices) were evil, somewere careless, and some appeared evil bythe way they were reported,” he said.However, Landau said his job is not to in¬terfere with an harass researchers. “Thegeneral view of the public...is that we areprotecting the public from the careless andevil investigators on our faculty. As a mat¬ter of fact, my own view is that we’re pro¬tecting the University of Chicago from thegeneral public.” In the instance of publicprotest, he said, the University can showthat a project was looked at very carefullyby the committee.Like White, Landau views placebo experi¬ments as worthwhile and valuable for isolat¬ing more effective treatments. In disagree¬ment with Kass, he labled concern over ahuman chimpanzee cross “silly, grotesqueand. . .tasteless” and said although someone is bound to try it, any reults would prob¬ably be of very little value.Shapiro, professor of microbiology, tookissue with White’s view of knowledge. Hestressed the consequences over the pur¬poses of new discoveries. While one mayknow the purpose of his investigation, hemay not know what his results will be Sha¬piro took the hominids in the opening of themovie 2001: A Space Odessey, as an examp¬le. One of these hominids, he said, discov¬ered that he could use a bone to kill others. The consequences of this discovery, unk¬nown to the hominid, were both evil andgood. Often, Shapiro continued, knowledgehas had evil consequences. He noted discov¬eries in cosmology which undermined Medi¬eval church authority and led to bloodywars. “But we can’t go back to the darkages,” he said.Crime in 1982Continued from page oneMurphy claims that Hyde Park crimefigures compare favorably with those ofother urban university communities. “Cam¬bridge (Massachusetts) has about the samecrime rate, while New Haven (Connecticut)is much higher, as is Berkeley (Califor¬nia),” he said.However, Murphy concluded, “You can¬not hang your hat on these or any other sta¬tistics. Any crime here can’t be hiddenunder favorable statistics.”Artists performLast Friday, Midway Studio began a per¬formance art series in which artists use thegallery as a setting in which to present lifeexperiences. Performance artists use a va¬riety of media (theatre, video, dance,music) in their presentation with resultsthat range from amateurish to aestheticalyuplifting. Tom Jaremba will perform to¬night at Midway Studios at 8 p.m. E. W.Ross will perform next Friday, Feb. 25 at 8p.m. and Kathleen Maltse will perform onMar. 4 also at 8 p.m. Admission to the per¬formances is $2.50, $1.50 for students. Formore information, call Richard Marr atMidway Studios, 753-4821.BEGINNER OR ADVANCED Cos? is about the same as a semester m aU S college $3 189 Price includes (fit round trip to Seville from NewYork. room, board, and tuition complete Government grants and loansavailable for eligible studentsLive with a Spanish family, attend classes four hours a day four days aweek, tour months Earn 16 hr$ of credit (equivalent to 4 semesters-taught m U S colleges over a two year time span) Your Spanishstudies will be enhanced by opportunities not available in a U S class room Standardized tests show our students language skills superiorto students completing two year programs in U S Advanced coursesalsoHurry, it takes a lot of time to make all arrangementsSPRING SEMESTER —Feb 1 June 1 /FALL SEMESTER — Sept 10Dec 22 each yearFULLY ACCREDITED A program of Trinity Christian CollegeSEMESTER IN SPAINFor full information-write to:2442 E. Collier S.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506(A Program of Trinity Christian College)New and RebuiltTypewriters,Calculators,Dictators, AddersCasioHewlett PackardTexas InstrumentCanonSharp REPAIRSPECIALISTSon IBM, SCM,Olympia, etc.FREE repairestimatesRENTALSavailable withU.ofC.I.D.The University of Chicago BookstoreOffice Machines & Photographic Dept.970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor962-7558 • 5-4364 (ON CAMPUS)22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983NewsTuition increases hiked 12% for 1983-1984UNDERGRADUATE TUITION OVER FIVE YEARS*7920ACADEMIC YEARDemocratic mayoral candidates profileContinued from page one“We expect no significant decrease ingrants from federal and state sources at anylevel of the University,” said Charles O’Con¬nell, vice-president and dean of students.“Indeed we hope for a modest increase. Atthis time we anticipate that the same levelof National Direct Student Loans and fe¬derally guaranteed loans will be available in1983-84 for undergraduate, graduate, andprofessional school students. In addition, weshall continue to offer Auxiliary Loansunder that relatively new federal programto those professional and graduate studentswho need additional assistance,” he said.Sixty-two percent of all students at theUniversity receive financial aid from theUniversity and from federal, state and othersources, 50 percent from University sourcesalone.“The University’s student aid program isamong our highest priorities,” Gray said.“The quality and diversity of our studentbody are key to the quality of the Universi¬ty.”The percentage increase of tuition has re¬mained in double digits for each of the pastsix years. Fourth year students in the Col¬lege next year will pay 55 percent more fortuition than they did their first year here.The percent tuition increases are compa¬rable to increases announced by other selec¬tive private colleges. Continued from page fiveHOUSING: Byrne declares that she hasdone much to improve public housing. Shehas allocated $100 million for construction ofapartment development projects for low in¬ come families, instituted a $50 million mo¬dernization program which has resulted in afull rehabilitation of elevators in city proj¬ects as well as greatly improving securityand sanitation disposal and pick-up. Byrnealso defends her highly publicized move tothe Cabrini-Green complex which resultedin programs that decreased crime and im¬proved recreational facilities.The Mayor also reorganized the ChicagoHousing Authority so that it is now com¬prised of five different teams, each devotedto a different aspect of housing. She has also instituted an Audit division to uncover wastein the CHA. Having reduced the depart¬ments deficit from $33 million in 1982 to $5.5million in 1982, the unit is hoping to balancethe budget over the next five years.CITY HALL MANAGEMENT: MayorByrne says that she has kept City Hall opento all. She has also sponsored a PersonnelOrdinance requiring every city job to be de¬fined and sponsored an Equal Opportunity-Council. This has resulted in a 12 percent in¬crease in minority appointments and 376women holding executive jobs.Three new trustees electedincluding former football greatFormer football great Willie Davis andtwo prominent Chicago executives wereelected to the University of Chicago’s Boardof Trustees yesterday. All three are alumniof the University.In addition to Davis, now a Los Angelesbusinessman, the trustees elected StanleyM. Freehling, an investment banker, andBernard Weissbourd, a real estate develop¬er.In 10 years with the Green Bay Packers,Davis was described as one of the greatestdefensive ends of all time. He was amember of five Packer championshipteams and was named the National FootballLeague’s all-defensive end five straightyears.He enrolled in the University of ChicagoGraduate School of Business in 1964, study¬ing full-time during the off-season, and re¬ceived an MBA degree in 1968.After retiring from football in 1970, he es¬tablished a Los Angeles beer distributorsh¬ip. He is a director of the Schlitz Foundationand also owns a company that operates LosAngeles radio station KACE—FM.Davis is a director and past president ofthe Urban League of Los Angeles, amember of the Career Counseling Group ofSouthern California, and has been chairmanof the Explorer Scouts of the Los Angelesarea. He has been a member of the Los An¬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 60646282-6900 geles Special Studies Commission.Freehling, who studied at the Universityin 1942-43, is a partner of Freehling & Co., aChicago investment house, and FreehlingBros., a real estate operation.Among his many cultural and civic inter¬ests, Freehling is a trustee of the Art Insti¬tute of Chicago and the Orchestral Associa¬tion, a life trustee of Ravinia Festival, and adirector of the Goodman Theatre and theChicago Theatre group. He is a past chair¬man of the Illinois Arts Council and headsthe Illinois Public Arts Commission.Weissbourd received a BS in chemistryfrom the University in 1941 and graduatedfrom its Law School in 1948. He is chairmanof Metropolitan Structures, Inc., a real es¬tate development firm that has engaged inprojects in Chicago, Detroit, Montreal, andseveral other cities.In addition to teaching urban studies andwriting extensively about urban issues,Weissbourd is a member of the Central CityCouncil of the Urban Land Institute, a direc¬tor of the Urban Renewal Division of Action,Inc., and a former director of the Metropoli¬tan Housing and Planning Council.He is also a director of the Center for theStudy of Democratic Institutions and theCenter for Psychosocial Studies, a trustee ofMichael Reese Hospital, and a member ofthe Fine Arts Music Foundation1701E.55TH 117 EVERYDAY684-3375 262-1593 §|||||v /. •>I;’"'.;• The Chicago Maroont •.• •• V.' reportersfeature writers,;>v. \ sports writerscopy editorsphotographersproduction people<; •.■•ij: / '-• •• '•• • -,; The Chicago Maroon is seeking per¬sons interested in working on allaspects of the paper. Come to a staffmeeting Sunday at 8 p.m. in theMaroon office, third floor of Ida NoyesHall.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, Februarv 18, 1983—23Inside IMChamberlin, Greenwood favored in residence playoffsChamberlin — Defending undergraduatechampion Chamberlin House is still theteam to beat in the residence league. Cham¬berlin is led by guard Don Pasulka, whoaveraged over 20 points per game this sea-By Nick Lynnand Andy WrobelAs the basketball season draws to a closeand the playoffs begin, the powers of thismost popular sport have surfaced. As we ex¬pected, there are both the perennial powersChamberlin and Hitchcock, and some sur¬prises such as Greenwood and to a lesser ex¬tent Fallers and Bishop. But who willemerge victorious from the playoffs? Whileplayoff teams and pairings were not deter¬mined by press time, the following should bea good guide to the contenders for the cham¬pionship.Rockefellercuumemcai oerviceof Holy Communion10 amDiscussion Class:“Castanets in the Cathedral”10 amReligious InstructionFor Children11 amUniversity Religious ServiceBRIAN A. GERRISHUniversity Preacher and Profof Historical Theology inthe Divinity School son. Other key Chamberlin players includecenter John Klassen and forward Paul Car¬lisle who provide inside scoring and re¬bounding strength. Neal Cannon, DonDraper, and Brian Waldman balance theChamberlin attack, and swing men BobTwillman and Pete White round out theteam. Its fast-paced offense and tight man-to-man defense ensure that Chamberlin willbe the odds-on favorite to capture yet an¬other IM title.Fishbein — due to the loss of several paststars, Fishbein’s success this season was indoubt. However, under the skillful guidanceof coach Sean Fitzgerald, the team provedthe critics wrong, beating powerful FallersA and losing only to top-ranked Chamberlin,while running its record to an impressive8-2. Led by a starting five compiled mostlyof freshmen, Fishbein’s success in theplayoffs seems assured. A balanced scoringattack, led by top scorers John Pressmanand Be Gusterson, is complemented by thesuperb defense and shot blocking ability ofJoe Mario. Along with aggressive play atboth ends of the court by Frank Connellyand Nick Perry, come major contributionsfrom Jim Pouemirou, Pete Himmelstein,Timmy Wong, Scott Hoffman, and RajeevCharlyou.Fallers A — An improving team that hasperhaps not yet peaked, this team is led bySteve Krone. Fallers A has perhaps themost balanced offensive attack with its in¬side strengths of Spiro Panagakis, “Lenny”Covello, Ron King, and a strong backcourt,Fallers A could be competitive in theplayoffs. Fallers has lost only to Chamberlinand Fishbein.Greenwood — As undefeated winners of theweak undergraduate white division, Green¬wood has yet to be challenged. With its 1-3-1half-court trap and tight 2-3 zone, Green¬wood makes things happen on defensiveplay, often resulting in a fast-break layup.To complement this aggressive defense,Greenwood has great shooting by ChrisWarshaw, team leader Roger Peterson, andPat New. This team is the top threat toChamberlin’s championship aspirations.Bishop House — A surprise in the past sea¬son, Bishop is currently 7-3. The startingfive includes Brendan Frawley, KevinO’Hara, John Munro, Jeff Farwell, andBarry Pollick. Frawley is perhaps the bestplayer on the team. O’Hara is known forfeistiness, while Munro is a strong force un¬derneath. Farwell is an excellent shooter,while Pollick is often successful with his un¬orthodox shooting style. Eric Muhr, RichKalski, and Stu McDermott are key back-upplayers.Tufts — The Tufts team, despite winningtheir first five games, have lost the lastthree out of four and the division lead toHale. The strengths are in the front line ofJohn Uglietta, Shong Chow, and MikeGOLDCITY INNGivenby the MaroonOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for lessA Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food Hughes, along with the consistently excel¬lent backcourt play of team captain MarkScolforo and Eric Rankin. Other key playersinclude guards Bill Lyddon, Scott McCon¬nell, Jay Ludwicki, and forwards Mike Ar¬thur and Steve Smith. The team emphasizesan effective fastbreak, tenacious defense,strong inside play, and perimeter shootingas it keys to winning, and should providegood competition in the playoffs if it canfield a good core of its top players.Hale — Hale’s finish should provide it with aplayoff position in which it will not face divi¬sion winners until the semifinals. In theopinion of so-called experts and “IM gods,”Hale may very well lose to the first decentteam it plays. However, Rob, Sid, Jim, andthe other Hale boys may have other plans.Dewey — One of the stronger up-and-com-ing teams in IM basketball, Dewey aslooked extremely well over the past fewweeks. In third place up until mid-January,Dewey came roaring to the head of the packby defeating formerly undefeated Tufts andHale, which led the division at one time.With a team of few stars but exceptionalteam balance, Dewey, led by Jim Rocke¬feller, has been able to earn deserved re¬spect.Hitchcock A — Its balance offense and stin¬gy defense led to a first place finish in one ofthe most difficult divisions in the residenceleague. Last year’s semifinalists returnwith the addition of hot-shooting guardsWeber and Ajemian, who split court-timewith defensive ace Radke. Center Long andforwards Amboian ad Paterson add both re¬bounding and formidable speed to the Hitch¬cock defense and running attack, and re¬serves Haslam, Jeffreys and Huang provideMetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 528-2858Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmJoin Us Now! capable relief. If the team could overcomeits inconsistency on offense, Hitchcockcould break its semifinals jinx and advanceto the championship.Salisbury/Vincent — In one of the majorupsets of the season, this quick team defeat¬ed Hitchcock in the past week, establishingitself as a tough team It could go far in theplayoffs with a lucky draw and if it can con¬tinue to play without mistakes and retainthe consistent shooting of Pat Nguyen, it willbe a team to watch.Upper Rickert — Possibly .he biggest teamin the men’s undergraduate league, thisteam has shown signs of greatness. Perhapsthe highlight of its season came againstHitchcock A. In this game, a ra^e situationoccurred, as all of Upper Ricker.’s playersshowed up to play. With Chris Nadon, Dar¬ryl Roberts, and Tom Phalen crashing theboards and Greg Valinet shooting from theoutside, Upper Rickert played a close gamewith Hitchcock. Look for this team to ad¬vance far in the playoffs, if all the playerscome out.Henderson — Noted for being a house of ath¬letes rather than basketball players, Hen¬derson has done reasonably well in basket¬ball. As co-champions of one of the weakestdivisions, Henderson will answer the ques¬tions of just how well a group of athletes cando against teams with basketball players.FIJI — Co-champios of the undergraduategreen division, this team may surprise somepeople in the playoffs. It looked tough, butnot consistent. With only five players, thisteam, led by Nick Varsam, Bill Jankovich,and Steve Barnhart may have problemswith some of the bigger, more aggressiveteams.HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00amw. Kenneth Williams, MinisterSusan Johnson, Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, ServeIIIIIIIIIIIIIt SCHOOL OF MEDICINE• UTESA •"CLASSES TAUGHT IN ENGLISHThe Medical program of Universidad Tecnologica DeSantiago (UTESA) in Santo Domingo, Dominicanmodel ofgo iuica«) in santo uomingcRepublic is tailored after the traditional U.S.Medical Education and is fully accreditedOPENINGS AVAILABLEOur Medical School is WHO listed.We qualify for the ECFMG Exam.For more information and Application Form please write to-UTESA SCHOOL OF MEDICINEFOREIGN STUDENT ADVISOR (SUITE 23)12820 WHITTIER BLVD., • WHITTIER, CA 90602 [IIIIIIIIIIIII■24—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983SportsMaroons hold off late Lawrence rally; win 58-56By Frank LubyDespite shooting 70 percent from the fieldin the closing minutes of the second half, theLawrence Vikings could not sink the shotswhen they had to. They missed two jumpersin the final 10 seconds Tuesday evening, al¬lowing the University of Chicago men's var¬sity basketball team to escape with a 58-56victory at the Henry Crown Field House.Chicago held leads of 10 and 11 points inthe final 20 minutes, and on both occasionsthey evaporated quickly. Leading 55-44 with6:27 remaining, Chicago managed only onebasket and hit just one of five free throws forthe rest of the game. Meanwhile, Lawrenceovercame a tight man-to-man Chicago de¬fense and climbed back in with some hotshooting. With 1:18 left, Chicago led by one,57-56, setting the stage for Lawrence’s op¬portunities to win.Forward Chris McLean stole a Chicagopass on a fast break, but Lawrence failed tocapitalize as Keith Libert intercepted a CamJackson pass with 41 seconds left.The Maroons spread into their fourcorners' offense, but with 27 seconds leftNick Meriggioli drove the lane and missed alay-in. Jackson of Lawrence grabbed the re¬bound, and called time out.Following the time out, Lawrence set upin its regular offense, but with seven sec¬onds on the clock Howard Cohn missed awide-open baseline jumper, and Meriggioligrabbed the rebound. The game seemedover when Jackson fouled Chicago guardWade Lewis, sending the Maroons’ co-cap-tain to the line in the bonus.Lawrence spent three time-outs to in¬crease the pressure on Lewis, who hit one ofNorth Central beatsboth swim teamsBy Edward AchuckBoth the men's and women’s swimmingteam, having dual meet records of 1-4, willenter into the Midwest Private CollegeChampionship with yet another loss. NorthCentral College defeated both the men's andwomen’s team this past weekend by scoresof 31-74 and 42-88 respectively.The men’s team won three of the 11 eventsheld. Phil Hoffman and Everett Lee werethe only first place finishers for Chicago.Hoffman won the 200-yard individual med¬ley, and the 200-yard butterfly while Leewon the 200-yard breaststroke.The women’s team won three of 15 eventsheld. These three events, however, were dueto the sole endeavor of Martha Kinney. Sheplaced first in all of her individual events,winning the 50-yard freestyle, the 100-yardfreestyle, and the 50-yard butterfly.Both the men’s and women s teams havefinished their dual meet schedule, and havetw'o championship meets left in the season.The first of these is this weekend at Lisle forthe Midwest Private College Champion¬ship.Sports CalendarWomen's Indoor TrackFeb. 19 — at Grinnell College InvitationalMen's Indoor TrackFeb. 18 — Wheaton College, Wabash Col¬lege and others, 6 p.m., FieldHouseMen's BasketballFeb. 19 — Ripon College, 4 p.m., FieldHouseWomen's BasketballFeb. 19 — Monmouth College, 2 p.m., FieldHouseWrestlingFeb. 18-19 — at Midwest Collegiate AthleticConference ChampionshipsSwimmingFeb. 18-19 — at Midwest Private CollegeChampionships his two free throws to make the score 58-56.The Vikings rebounded the second shot,broke up court, and at the buzzer DerrickDeWalt tossed up a somewhat hurried 15-footer which glanced off the rim to preservethe Maroons’ victory.“We didn’t want to play for the last shot,”commented Vikings’ coach Mike Gallus onhis team’s strategy following the timeoutwith 27 seconds left. “We figured we had abetter chance trying to get an open shot withour regular offense as soon as possible.”Chicago went almost five minutes withoutscoring late in the second half, but the bas¬ket which broke the drought turned out to bethe decisive hoop. With 1:40 left and Chicagoin its four corners’ stall, guard Eric Kubytried to drive the lane. Jackson guardedhim, but Jackson had four fouls at the timeand consequently had to play somewhatloosely. The quick Kuby shot right past himand fed Mike Murden underneath for a bas¬ket, giving Chicago a 57-54 lead. Lawrencecame right back, though, as Dan Busiel tooka pass from McLean and scored just ten sec¬onds later, cutting the lead to 57-56.With Chicago on top 55-44, Lawrencescored ten points in a row before Chicagocalled timeout with 3:01 remaining in thegame. Two baskets by McLean and threepoints from Busiel keyed the comeback,which climaxed when guard Ted Malkow skistole an inbounds pass and passed to SteveAnderson underneath for a turn-aroundjumper off the glass.Offense became Chicago's problem. While the defense continued to apply consistentpressure, the offense produced three costlyturnovers and missed the front end of twoone-and-one situations as well. Chicagomanaged only one shot from the field in thatspan.After the timeout, McLean fouled Liberton the fast break, but Libert missed both ofhis free throws. Lawrence couldn’t moveahead, though, as DeWalt missed a shot in¬side and Meriggioli grabbed the rebound.Kuby brought the ball upcourt, and. fromthe four corners’, set up Murden’s key bas¬ket.Chicago’s other big lead came with 14:41left, when a Libert basket gave the Maroonsa 42-32 lead. Lawrence, led by two basketsby Jackson, cut the lead to three, 45-42, with10:53 to go.The first half was consistently close, asthe score stood tied on four occasions, andthe biggest lead Chicago could managereached just six points. With the score tiedat 27 with two minutes left, though, theMaroons put together a 7-1 scoring surge totake a 34-28 halftime lead.Libert led all scorers with 17. and Merig¬gioli added 15. McLean led the Vikings with12. Chicago’s last home game this seasonhappens Saturday afternoon against Riponat 3:30 p.m.With Tuesday's conference victory, Chi¬cago's conference record is now 4-8 good forthird place in the North Division of the Mid¬west Conference behind Beloit and LakeForest. Chicago's overall record is 8-8.In fact, we ll even pay you more than $550 a month while you attend. That'sin addition to paying for your full tuition and required books and fees.It's all part of the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program.How does it work?If you're selected for a Physician Scholarship-from the Army, Navy, orAir Force-youre commissioned as an officer in the ReserveWhile you're in school, you’ll serve 45 days a year on active duty, gainingvaluable medical experience. After graduation, you will serve three or moreyears, the length depending on the requirements of the Service selected andyears of scholarship assistance received.As an Armed Forces physician you’ll receive officer's pay and benefits,and enjoy the advantages of working regular hours. You’ll also see a diversityof patients and have opportunities to use sophisticated medical technology.But most important, while you're in medical school we ll help pay the bills.For more information, send in the coupon. There's no obligation whatsoever.Yes, I am interested in receiving more information about an Armed Forces HealthProfessions Scholarship I understand there is no obligationFor more information mail this coupon to:Armed Forces Scholarships. P.O. Box C1776, Huntington Station, NV11746 1IThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18. 1983—25Classified AdsSPACE3 bedrooms condominiums for sale 55th streetand Everett. Cal! 357-7926 evenings 979-6091days.Room in spacious 3rd fir. apt. avail. Mar. 1Near transp., shopping. $132+ dep. 684-8024 7-8pm.APT. FOR RENT-HYDE PARKA fine 1 bedroom apt. in Hyde Park. One Halfblock from all your shopping needs and 4Vjblocks from U of C. Rent $360 -F up. Call forstudent + senior citizen discounts. 52nd +Woodlawn. For inspection call 643-6428 or 493-2525.5114 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.KIMBARK-IN HYDE PARKLimited Time OnlyThree bedrooms, 2 baths, V2 block from shopping 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.5100 S. Cornell Ave.One bedroom + studio apts for rent. Manyw/fine view of the lake + skyline. One blockfrom all your shopping needs + within 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 studentand senior citizen discount. Ask for Mr. War¬dian. 3 BR ranch on 2 lots in completely private set¬ting in Beverely Shores, Ind. 45 min. from U ofC by car or frain. Cent, air attached 2 cargarage. Alum, siding. 5 appliances. $67500 CallRenard at Callahan Realty. 219-926-4298.rFern roommate wanted for 3-bed apt. 54th &Ellis. Partly furnished sunny bedroom, onminibus routes $175/mo call 947-0360 after 6p.m.One bedroom apt. $275, studio $200. Incl. all butelect, student discount on quarterly rntl 5210Woodlawn. Call 684-5030 bef. 8:30 a.m.Looking for housing? Check InternationaJHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisiting Chicago. 753-2270, 2280.Clean quiet building IV2 & 2'/2 studio apts newlydecorated included all utilities and appliances.225.00 to 270.00 mth. 493-6250.Share a fur. 2 bd. apf. on 55th near coop with amale grad stu. call aft. 6 pm 947-0214 or 684-1995.Room in spacious 2-bedroom apt. $165/mo. 2blocks from UofC, living room w/fireplace,laundry facil., sunny. 947-8077.Grad, co-op hse. seeks female for immediateoccupancy. Ideal location. Low rent. 955-2653.2 br in 4 br APARTMENT AVAILABLE 53rdand Dorchester $150 or 160/mo call 667-4251.Large 2 bedroom apt. 2 bath Lakeview 53rd &Hyde Park 520/mo+elect. E ve. 363-5955.SUBLET SPR/SUM, unfurnished studio apt insecurity building on lake. DR, kitchen, pool,parking, on bus routes. $359 UC stud/staff, $399others. Avilable mid-March 493-7989.1 br apt 5514 S. Blackstone. Clean secure on Cbus rt laundry in bldg. $380 p.m. incl utilities.Avail 1 Mar. 947-0061 eves.CalendarFRIDAYConcrete Gothic Theatre: Two student-written oneact plays: "Reading in the Dark” by Keith Flemingand Campbell McGrath’s “7 Hours.” 8 p.m. Reyn¬old’s Club 1st floor theatre. Tickets at door.Men’s Indoor Track: U.C vs. Wheaton, Wabash, etc.6 p.m. HCFHCollegium Musicum: Dances and Motets of the 14thand 15th Century Italy — Mary Springfels guestdirector 8 p.m. Bond Chapel FreeMinerology-Petrology Seminar: Caol Prombo on‘‘Nitrogen Isotopes and Abundances in the EarlySolar System and Iron Meteorites” 3 p.m. Hinds101Center for Cognitive Science: Lecture: Ned Block on“Mental Pictures and Cognitive Science” 4:15 p.m.Beecher 102.Geophysicical Sciences Cooloquium: Abraham Ler-man on "Carbon. Sulfur, and Oxygen GeochemicalCycles of the Past and Present” 1:30 p.m. Hinds Au¬ditorium.U.S. Asian Christian Fellowship: Weekly meeting7:30 p.m. Augustana Lutheran Church 55th andWoodlawn. Info: 288-5274.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30p.m. INH Library. Topic: “Humility in TheologicalStudies”U.S. Skii Team: Meeting with films 7 p.m. INHHillel: Reform-Progressive Services 5 p.m.; AdatShalom Sabbath Dinner 6 p.m.; Lecture: Edward M.Levine on "Religious Cults: Are They Really Reli¬gious?” 8:30 p.m.Arabic Circle: Evelyn Accad will present "Songs onthe War in Lebanon & Women in the Middle East”3:30 p.m. Pick 218Rockefeller Chapel: Lenten Services 12:15 p.m.DOC: Reds 6:15 & 10:15 p.m. Cobb $2Calvert House: Program for Medical Students onAbortion. Pizza Supper 5:30 p.m. LSF: Wizard of Oz 7:15 p.m. Law Sch. Aud. $2; MyMan God fry 9:30 p.m. $2Hillel: Orthodox Shabbat Services 9:15 p.m.; Up¬stairs Minyan 9:30 p.m.; Bus leaves for Second City7:30 p.m.Calvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation 4:30p.m.; Mass at 5 p.m.Crossroads: Dinner 6 p.m. $3; Film: “Land of theDisappearing Buddha-Japan" 7:30 p.m. FreeSUNDAYOriental Institute Films: Egypt: Gift of the Nile 2p.m. Museum Aud. FreeNew Music Ensemble: 20th Century Composersfrom the U.S.A. 8 p.m. Goodspeed Recital HallFreeCourt Theatre: Preview of Antigone 7:30 p.m. NewTheatre. Call 753-4472 for tickets.DOC: Reds 2:30 p.m. Cobb S2; The Aviator’s Wife 8p.m. Cobb $2LSF: The Wizard of Oz 2:30 p.m. Law Sch. Aud. $2Mediaeval Re-creation and Reaissance Society:Meeting 4 p.m. INHFolkdancers: International Folkdancing. Teaching 8p.m.; Request Dancing 10 p.m.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch. $1.75/sandwich 11a.m.-l p.m.Rockefeller: Ecumenical Service of Holy Commu¬nion 9 a.m.; Discussion Class “Castenets in the Ca¬thedral” 10 a.m.; Religious Instruction for kids 10a.m.; University Religious Services, Brian A. Ger-rish sermon, 11 a.m.Brent House: Episcopal Eucharist and Supper 5:30p.m. 5540 S. WoodlawnCalvert House: Mass at 8:30 a.m. at Calvert House;Mass at 11 a.m. for Lisa Good at Bond Chapel. Massat 5 p.m. Calvert HouseCrossroads: Bridge 3 p.m.SATURDAYMAB Concert: King Sunny Ade & the African Beats— The Best of Nigerian JU JU Music 8 p.m. MandelHall. $15/$5 with U.C. Student I.D. at Reynold'sClub Box Office.Concrete Gothic Theatre: Two student-written oneact plays: “Reading in the Dark” by Keith Flemingand Campbell McGrath's “7 Hours: the Autobio¬graphy of Evard Munch” 8 p.m. 1st floor Reynold'sClub TheatreMen’s Basketball: U.S. vs. Ripon 4 p.m. HCFHWomen’s Basketball: U.C. vs. Monmouth College 2p.m. HCFHOriental Institute: Children’s Workshop: “Magicand Its Uses in the Ancient Near East” 1- a.m. S5Info: 753-2573Music Dept.: Susan Ross, viola da gamba; withThomas McCracken, Harpsicord; Julie Jeffrey,gamba. Works by the English School, Schenck,Marais & Loeb 8 p.m. Goodspeed Recital HallFreeCourt Theatre: Preview Antigone 8 p.m NewTheatre call 753-4472 for tickets. MONDAYDOC: Charlie Chaplin Revue followed by a talk byGerald Mast 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Folkdancers: International Folkdancing: Teaching 8p.m.; Request Dancing 10 p.m.Comm, on the Conceptual Foun. of Science: Collo¬quium: Robert Cumming on "Acquiring Communi¬cative Conventions” 8 p.m. Cobb 107English Dept.: Undergraduate English Dept. Party!Excerpts from Welles’ Macbeth and Kurosawa'sThrone of Blood with comments from Professors Be-vington and Mast. Quantrell Aud. (Cobb 209) 4:15p.m.Chemistry Dept.: Lecture: Alan H. Cowley on“Main-Group Compounds With Low CoordinationNumbers” 4 p.m. Kent 107Hillel: Israeli Folk Dancing 8 p.m. Blue Gargoyle $1per evening.U.C. Judo Club: Meets for practice 6 p.m. BartlettCalvert House: Mass at 3:30 for Commuter Stu¬dents; Discussion and Sherry Hour for CommuterStudents 4:15 p.m.Crossroads: English Classes: Beg. 10 a.m., Int. 10:45a.m.; Beg. Spanish 7:15 p.m.; Beg. Dutch 7:30 p.m.26—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18, 1983 Fur Rms Kit Priv Clean Nonsmo 366-3458/955-7083.Will pay $50 to student to take over univ. hous¬ing contract. Call 667-1138 before 8:30 AMIN THE HEARTOF HYDE PARKBeautiful studio apt. for rent. Agent onpremises. 5424 Cornell Ave. 324-1800.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 955-4203.3 way table lamps 1 pr white-gold metal trimwith crystals 1 pr black metal with brass trim$25.00 a pr. Call 493-5501.VINTAGE CLOTHING sale a brationEverything thing half price. This monfh opentwo weekends to better accommodate youFebruary 19, 20 -I- 26, 27 12 noon-6pm. We cleanout - you clean up at HEAVEN 6981 N. Sheridan- Rogers Park.1979 Chevette, 2 doors-hatch back, Stick shift.$2,690. Call 692-7390 (2p.m.-5p.m.).20% Off Selected Frames!!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E 55 493 67002 Prints For Price of 1!!MODEL CAMERA 342 E 55th 493-6700HALF PRICE!!! ON SELECTEDDarkroom EquipmentModel Camera 1342 E 55th1976 Chevy Malibu solid engine minor repairs.Good long distance car. Asking $900. Call Markat 947-0547.APARTMENT SALE SATURDAY Feb. 19 1369East Hyde Pk Apt 503 10-2pm Beds new,kingsize simmons $300, twin $100 includes box-springs, mattress, frames. French provincialfurniture (desk, chest, etc.) womens 3 spd bike$45, girls huffy new $40 tricycle, lamp,blankets, rollaway bed, etc.58th & Harper condo elec, newly remod. 3bdrms. W/study Irge. liv. & din. rms., br.kitch., w/all mod. appls., P/2 baths, indiv. unitcoritr. cent, air, heat, humid., & air cl. over1,500 sq. ft. new hdwd. firs., wlk dist. to UofC(Law & Med schls.), I.C. & shop. cntr. $86,000.Mort. assum. at 10%, avail. April. Ray 890-9390, aft. 9p.m. 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 for *studies on brain functions and perception$3/hr. 962 8846.OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round.Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All Fields.$500 $ 1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write IJC Box 52-14-5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625Free room in east Hyde Park in exchange forpart time care of 3 yr. boy & light hskng. Hoursideal for student. Maturity references 8, ex¬perience w/small children required. CallE lizabeth at 288-0578 evenings.Sitter three hours Sundays six-year-old. 955-2148DESPERATE NEED for volunteers in theHyde Park-Kenwood area. Posots open in ad¬vocacy, public policy, law, medicine, tutoringand others. Call or Stop By The VolunteerBureau 955-4109 3rd fir Blue Gargoyle.SERVICESJUDITH 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.Psychologist forming therapy group in HydePark to change women's longstanding strug¬gles with uncontrolled eating. RosalindCharney, Ph.D. 538 7022.Dating Group: Advanced Degrees/Introduc¬tions telephone matches unmarried, degreedHyde Parkers and many others with care andalacrity. Try us. For callback information:363-9073, anytime.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Large or smalljobs. Competitive prices. 324 5943, 667 4285.CHILDCARE M-F. Certified Teacher.References available. 536 7064,FINANCIAL AIDFORMEDICAL SCHOOL[ Full 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) 263-1207/1224A great way of lifeClassified AdsBABYSITTER UC grad, exp, loves kids.Available day and eve. Call Cindy at 752-8248.They all type but do they kill? THE ASSASSINTYPES just $l/pg. No mistakes. Ever. 684-2559.SCENESWriters workshop PL 2-8377Painting classes tor all levels Wed. evenings6:30 to 9:30 Instructed by experienced artist,teacher, lecturer, BFA, MFA. Art Institute,and Univ. of Chicago, $140 for ten weeks - artiststudio, 546 W. Washington - limited enrollment,930 9317 or 446 7183.WOMEN'S COFFEEHOUSE: An evening ofwarm music, coffee and conversation withspecial performances by feministsinger/songwriter CARRIE GERENDASY.Friday Feb. 18. Ida Noyes East Lounge 812pm. Sponsored by the Women's Union andSGFC.Nite Flight Tune In Sundays Midnite to 3:30Best Music in Hyde Park Jazz & R + B on 88.3FM WHPK with host Reggie Sanson.Gilbert 8. Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore,presented in Mandel Hall, 57th 8, University,March 11th & 12 at 8pm, March 13th at 2pm.Tickets at Mandel Hall box office, 962-7300.COOKING CLASSES. Chinese and International series. Wendy Gerick 538-1324.PERSONALS8'/2 is number one - numero uno.Great party! Thanks Psi U!Dear Jewish Grandmother, OY, what aziskeit! Thank you for taking care of me.What'll I ever do without you? Love, TheKneidelach KidBAMBI & BUNNY: You are the mostWAYWARD girls I could ever hop to know! XXTRIXIESTEP TUTORINGHelp a child feel bright and intelligent.Volunteer to tutor elementary or high schoolstudents for two hours a week. Contact Mike at241-6394 (evenings) for more information.DELAYED MAIL SERVICE$l/letter $5 for 20 send letters along with dateto be mailed to: P.O. Box 53352, Chicago, IL60653.NEEDATYPIST?Excellent Work - Reasonable Rates. Tel. 536-7167.ISRAELI FOLKDANCINGMondays 8:00 p.m. Blue Gargoyle 5565 S.University, 2nd floor. DONATIONS: $1.00Teacher: Dalla Paludis. Sponsored by HillelFoundations. ZAP-BANG!!!HOVERTANK — the Newest and Most ExcitingSciencefiction Wargame in Years. Just Out byCLOSE SIMULATIONS. Eight geomorphic maps,over 100 counters, 16 Scenarios for two or moreplayers, based on a clean simultaneous movementsystem. Try combat in the 21st century: $16.00(III. residents please add 96<t tax) plus $1 forpostage and handling to CLOSE SIMULATIONS,P.O. Box 2247, Northbrook, 11.60062.LOX AND BAGELBRUNCHEVERY SUNDAY - 11:00 A M. - 1:00 P.M .Also orange juice, coffee, tea, tomatoes andonions. Unbeatable prices. Cost: $1.75 persandwich. Hillel Foundation, 5715 WoodlawnAvenue.GILBERT&SULLIVANH.M.S. Pinafore at Mandel Hall, 57th & Univer¬sity, Friday, March 11th & Saturday, March12th at 8 PM, tickets $7; and Sunday, March13th at 2 PM, tickets $4. Tickets at Mandel Hallbox office 962 7300.JOBS AVAILABLETutoring/teaching jobs available: math,chem, English, physci: UC talent Bank Program. Come to the Office of Career Counselingand Placement—2nd floor Reynolds Club.WE'VE DECIDED!!BLACKFRIARS: The moment you've all beenwaiting for. Chorus Line? My Fair Lady?Pacific Overtures? No! BYE BYE BIRDIE!Auditions and gen. meeting, 1st week. Look forposters. At last a musical to call our own...HOTLINEWhen there is no one around to listen, there isan alternative. Dial 753-1777 between 7pm and7am.SAGE OPEN FORUMCurious about the Baker Report? Come to anINTERDEP'TL STUDENT MEETING todiscuss grad education, Weds, Feb 23, 4:00P.M. SS122.OBS STUDY BREAKOBS study break Friday Feb 18th, 3:30pm-6pm, East Lounge Ida Noyes. Facultywelcome.POLARITY BALANCINGTension and blocked energy restrict both yourcreative potential and relaxation PolarityBala-cing through manipulation and exercises,helps you release blocks in your natural healing energies so you may use them more effectively. Non sexual. Call Bob Rueter at 324 7530for information or appointment.MOVING AND HAULINGDiscount Moving and Hauling free packing ser¬vice free estimates references courteousanytime Bill 493-9122 If no ans keep tryingCanonPROGRAMProgrammed AutomationPlus Shutter-PrioritySophistication.System Inte3ratbn.'C anorr# • 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 andFower Winder A2 shown optionalmodel camera1342 East 55th • 493-6700 F IN ANCECOMMITTE Ewill meet on Feb. 28. Please have budget re¬quests in for the Feb. 21 meeting and send a repof your organization that evening.SWING AT THE PUBTake a sentimental journey with LEONARD 8.BROWN playing the Best of Ragtime & Swingat the PUB Feb 24 10pm immediately followingthe Hill Street Blues PUB membership re¬quired 21 8. over w/UCID Membership $2 atdoor.JAPANESEEXPERIMENTALFILM 1960-1980Part 1 Feb. 21 Part 2 Feb. 23 8:00pm at Interna¬tional House 1414 E. 59th Free admission.FOTA MEETINGHelp us plan the 1983 Festival Of The Arts.LOTS OF FUN! Tue. Feb 22 - 7pm - IDANOYES HALL Rm 218DINNER & FILMSaturday, Feb. 19. Crossroads 5621 S.Blackstone Dinner 6:00pm. $3.00. Fiom: "Bud¬dhism: Land of the Disappearing Buddha-Japan."POETRY READINGPoetry reading by Chicago poet Orte Monday21 3rd FI. Ida Noyes 8:00 GALA eventguaranteed!!CAREERS/IN PUBLISHINGThe Director of the RADCLIFFEPUBLISHING PROCEDURES COURSE,a six-week graduate program in bookand magazine publishing at HarvardUniversity, will be on campusWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1983. Ageneral meeting will be held in TheCareer Placement Center Library toduscuss career opportunities inpublishing. FOR INDIVIDUAL AP¬POINTMENTS CALL WILL SNYDER,753-3291. BACH IN THE PUBCome celebrate the glorious sonorities of JSBduring Saturday's Happy Hour (4:30-6:30).You are invited to B YOT. The Pub's new soundsystem will work wonders. 21 + over.Members only.ISRAELI VIEW OFTHE MIDDLE EASTRobbie Sabel The current Situation in the Mid¬dle East An Israeli Viewpoint Monday Feb 217:30pm International House Homeroom.GALA EVENTMonday 21 8:00 INH 3rd fl. POETRYREADING by Chicago-area poet readingpoetry, fables 8. more.S.G. RIDES LISTThe student services committee is puttingtogether a ride list for spring break. If youhave a ride to offer, or need a ride any place,call 753-3273 between 11:11-2:00 on Mon. or12 00-3 30on W-F or leave a note in IN. 306.OPENMIKE ANDPICKIN'PARTYAt the International Coffeehouse with the U ofC Folklore Society 8:OOpm-1 :00am Fri. Feb. 18at I-House 1414 E. 59th St.BE PAID TOTRAVELFREECAREER SEMINARON TOUR DIRECTINGWED FEB. 23, 2:30-4:30 or 7-10 PMLAKESHORE BEST WESTERN HOTEL600 NORTH LAKESHORENEXT CLASS MAY 2, 1983FREE PLACEMENT ASSISTANCEINTERNATIONAL TOURMANAGEMENT INSTITUTER.S.V.P. COLLECT (41 5)957 9489somfoAar/o/Ze fi/'oZ/f%ea/ Sj/a/e %.493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEREMEMBER “BILANDIC", 7.9%MORTGAGES? THIS HAS IT!Two Bedroom Comer Views Condo,at 55th & Kenwood, End of Universi¬ty Park. You Must Not Earn MoreThan $40,000 Total Gross to Qualify.Asking $63,500.IN THE MIDDLE OF THE BLOCKNear 56th & Kimbark, Only 3 Owners Total, aReally Spacious 7 Room With Balcony, BigYard, Garage. Low Monthly Maintenance. Allin Tip-Top Condition. Must Wait Until June forPass. $89,500.57TH & KENW OOD “THE KEEP" BLDG.Has Charm, Excellent Association, Super Condition In¬side and Out. You Have a Choice With 3 Transferees.Look and Compare.Second Floor Sunny 2 BR Enclosed(Front) Sunroom/StudvFirst Floor(Side)First Floor.(Rear) . . . I BR A 2 Studieds$64.0002 BR.... $63 000HOUSES, HOUSES, BIG AND SMALLV ICTORIAN Eight Spacious Rooms Enclosed Bart Porch. Sun Dech Real Fireplace. Sen Kitchen. Excellent Systems $172,000TOWNHOUSE Eight Room Modem Tri-Level Near 56th A Harper, $! 12.500.FREE-ST ANDING Right on Campus Near 58th A Blackstone Histone Well cared for 10 Room Resuience $250,000TEENY-TINY From the Columbian Exposition Very Small 7 Rotym. 2 Bath 55th A Dorchester $69 OOOThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, February 18. 1983—27A5 HUMSeminar Series 1081-83Tki’ Program in the Liberal Arts and SconcesBasic to Human Biology and Medicinepresents a lecture onThe Public World of Childhood:What Is The Professional Stake f7Professor Mat aarct Hosmhei mHelen Ross Professor andDcan. School of Social Service AdministrationWednesday, Tebruary 23.10837-30 pm.Harper 130All mitre‘■tedversons are tnvitid to attend,There will be a reception with the speakerin Harper zSj following the lecture. GERMAN BEER SPECIALS!!KROMBACHER $199 •«-*-orEDELBRAU 1FROM PORTUGALLANCER’S WINE:i!::r *979•RubeoReg. 3.79 750 ML FROM FRANCEMOUTON CADETRED OR $Q89WHITE «L#Reg. 4.98 750 MLFROM FRANCEALEXIS LICHINEROSE d’ ANJOUReg. 4.98 $ 098750 ML dmd BAILEY’SIRISH CREAMReg. 15.29 $1098750 ML J- V/MARTELLCOGNAC V.S.Reg. 13.98 ^ I750 ML A Vr CANADIANCLUBRe, 8.49 tfJ*9750 ML VFSale Items We reserveLINCOLN LIQUORS r<r,siot.Hour. 1516 E. 53rd St. prin,lns ,rro,sMon-Fri 7 am - MidSat7am-Mid Phrwio 7^9.49Qfi Sale itemsSun 12 noon Mid rllUIIC / 34 ‘♦400 noticed.PflRT-TimE JOBSon campusEARN *4.50 PER HOURIf you’re looking for an unusual job opportunity for the rest of the school year, The University of ChicagoAlumni Telefund needs your help.We will be contacting thousands of Chicago alumni by telephone for their gifts to the University. Theprogram will run for the rest of the school year.We’ll pay you $4.50 an hour. Phoning hours run from 6:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday.We require you to work 2 sessions per week.APPLY NOW!ALUMNITELEFUND Call Mike Levine, 753-1905 between 1 P.M. &5 P.M. for an interview.THE CHICAGO ALUfTlNI TELEFUND