- grey city journal grey city journalSPRUNG FASHIONScover RETURN OF KEITHbackcover—The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 44 The Chicago Maroon ©Copyright 1983 The University of Chicago Friday, April 8, 19834th Ward candidates exchangeattacks as race winds downmatter of political expedience.Evans notes that he was one ofthe few Democratic committee¬men to vote “no” to a motion to en¬dorse Byrne for re-election. Bydoing so, he was the only black al¬derman-committeeman to voteagainst Byrne’s re-election Wash¬ington carried every precinct inthe 4th Ward in winning the Demo¬cratic nomination.Nevertheless, Preckwinkle andher allies have charged thatEvans’ workers supported Byrne.Don Rose, a political analyst, toldThe Reader that Evans' precinctcaptain in Rose’s precinct (the32nd), worked for Byrne. However,in that precinct, Washington won,receiving 295 votes, while RichardM. Daley took 76, and Byrne took71. This may be a result of the workof Preckwinkle backers, though,for Preckwinkle carried the pre¬cinct with 195 votes, while Evanstook 144, and other candidates re¬ceived 71.In the 27th Precinct, Preckwin¬kle forces have charged that elec¬tion judges were illegally demon¬strating how to vote for Byrne andEvans. If this occurred, it helpedEvans but not Byrne. Evans re¬ceived 135 votes there to Preckwin¬kle's 10, with the other 66 votesbeing split between the other can¬didates. Washington won the pre¬cinct with 188 votes, while Byrnetook 36, and Daley 10.Preckwinkle has also noted thatwhile she has passed Washingtonliterature with her literature,Evans has not, as on Election Day,Evans’ workers were pushing ei¬ther for Evans only, or a Byrne-Evans vote. Evans has retortedthat Washington forces in the wardwere Preckwinkle workers who didnot give Evans any Washington lit¬erature to pass on Election Dayafter obtaining supplies for thewhole ward.Preckwinkle has also attackedseveral points of Evans' record asalderman. Pointing to what shecalled a “laziness factor,” Preck¬winkle said that while 167 city treeplantings have taken place in the4th Ward since 1979, over 1000 treeplantings have occurred in the 5thWard. Preckwinkle notes that citytree plantings only require a re¬quest by an alderman, thereforethe low 4th Ward figure indicatesan alderman who does not work ashard as the 5th Ward Alderman.Evans said that the 167 treeplantings figure is wrong. He fur¬ther charged that slow delivery ofservices has been part of his “pun¬ishment” for disagreeing with theByrne administration. He said thatthis disagreement has not cost himthe power to pass his legislationthrough the City Council, while the5th Ward Alderman, Larry Bloom,has not been able to pass legisla¬tion which he has sponsored.Continued on page 23Ex Libris gets a new look Preckwinkle’s strongest attackshave come on Evans’ record dur¬ing his ten-year tenure as aider-man and on vote fraud chargedagainst election judges named byEvans, who served as 4th W’ardRegular Democratic Commitee-man. Preckwinkle, in discussingthe charges of vote fraud, charged,“There is no way Evans can disas¬sociate himself from this activity(of vote fraud). As DemocraticCommitteeman, he recommendsthe judges. As the incumbent al¬derman, these are his precinctcaptains (encouraging votefraud).” She further charges that“it suits his (Evans’) purposes tohave (judges) who are incompe¬tent and to encourage and allowfraud on election day.”In defending himself againstthese allegations, Evans said thatthe investigations conducted by theState’s Attorney’s office and theUS District Attorney have notturned up any irregularities in thevoting procedure. He furthercharged that Preckwinkle’scharges, which he said were madea month after the election, are“self-serving” devices meant to di¬vert the attention of voters awayfrom the issues of the campaign.Preckwinkle has been trying toride on the coattails of HaroldWashington in the election. Postersrecently appearing in the wardhave both Preckwinkle’s andWashington’s picture on them, andPreckwinkle workers have beendistributing Washington-Preck-winkle buttons. While Washingtonhas made no endorsement in therace, Preckwinkle has been run¬ning with the backing of the Inde¬pendent Voters of Illinois-Indepen¬dent Precinct Organization(IVI-IPO), which has also en¬dorsed Washington’s mayoral bid.Evans has also endorsed Washing¬ton’s mayoral bid, but Preckwin¬kle backers have accused Evans ofsupporting Washington only as aFinal alterations of the Ex LibrisCoffeeshop in Regenstein Librarywere completed this week, addinga two-door display refrigerator tothe recently installed built-incounter. These additions were paidfor by the majority of the shop’sprofits from the 1981-82 academicyear.According to Rita Joyce, manag¬er, the new arrangement increasesstorage capacity and efficiency forthe workers while allowing moreaccessible selection for custom¬ers.“The new counter and refrigera¬tor allow us to stock more and runout of items less. Also, it is mucheasier for the workers to maneuverbehind the counters rather thanstruggle through a crowd of cus¬ tomers,” Joyce said.Appropriations of last year’s ap¬proximate $7000 profit were decid¬ed on by the Ex Libris GoverningBoard, which is made up of StudentGovernment members, Ex Librisand library staff. The board allo¬cated $3705 for the building and in¬stallation of the counters and $1380for the display refrigerator. Al¬though the committee has not yetdecided the fate of the remaining$1015, Joyce suggested three possi¬bilities.“The money could either go toStudent Government into an auxil¬iary account for Ex Libris, or per¬haps into more equipment,” shesaid. “It’s up to the board.”Continued on page 23 PHOTO BY ZLATKO BATISTICHNew refrigerator and counters at Ex LibrisRosett as business school deanBy Jeff TaylorJohn P. Gould Jr., eighteen-yearfaculty member and former spe¬cial assistant to Secretary of StateGeorge Shultz, was named dean ofthe University of Chicago BusinessSchool Tuesday, succeeding Rich¬ard Rosett.Gould, 44, is a specialist in mi¬croeconomics and industrial orga¬nization, and received his MBAand PhD degrees from Chicago’sbusiness school. He is expected toenhance the school’s link to busi¬ness realities while maintaining itstheoretical style.In announcing the appointment,President Hanna Gray said “JackGould’s appointment reflects thehigh standards of the GraduateSchool of Business and the broadintellectual interests of Its facul¬ty.”Gould was chosen by his fellowfaculty members to assume the of¬fice of dean on July 1, when Rosett completes his second term. Rosettwill return to full-time researchand teaching, spending next yearat Standford University’s HooverInstitute.Gould served as Shultz’ assistantin 1969 and 1970 when Shultz wasSecretary of Labor and Director ofthe Office of Management andBudget. “He thought I could usethe experience,” Gould said.Gould has edited the Journal ofBusiness since 1976 and is asso¬ciate editor of the Journal of Fi¬nancial Economics. He was asso¬ciate editor of the Journal ofAccounting and Economics from1978 to 1982.Among the topics of Gould’s pub¬lished work are microeconomictheory, prevailing wage laws, in¬vestment theory, transportationcosts and the dynamics of mar¬kets.A native of Chicago, Gould re¬ceived a BS with the highest honorsPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANFourth Ward aldermanic candidates Toni Preckwinkle (left)and Timothy Evans.John Gould named to By Cliff GrammichWhile voters city-wide willchoose the future mayor, clerk,and treasurer of Chicago, manywards will hold aldermanic run-offelections, including the 4th Ward.In the first round, held Feb. 22, in¬cumbent Alderman Timothy C.Evans led a field of eight candi¬dates with approximately 46 per¬cent of the vote. Challenger ToniPreckwinkle garnered 24 percentof the vote in finishing second. AsEvans did not gain a majority ofthe vote, he was forced into a run¬off with Preckwinkle. In the in¬terim campaign between the first-round and the runoff, charges ofvote fraud, campaign smear tac¬tics, and other attacks have beenexchanged by the candidates.succeedfrom Northwestern University in1960. He lives in Hyde Park withhis wife and two children.John P. Gould, Jr.EVER FEEL LIKE AFINEST ro\-ik ?■&*r*?EC»Al fiC tm ^ERmSSfON£1on NORWAYSARDINE?SMOKED BRffUNS IN OLIVE OILEver feel like dancing but have never liked the traditional campus "Hot Spots"? Well now you don'thave to brave crowds or feel like a sardine for an inch and a half of dancing space. If you like todance but dislike the usual crowds and commotion why not tryLOWCOMMOTION DANCEHeld in the scenic theatre of Ida Noyes Hall, this will allow you to enjoy dancing with room and air tospare. Come try it out. You've got nothing to lose 'cause it's FREE! So if you're frustrated with the cur¬rent social options students have but enjoy great music and love to dance, SWITCH ON TO LOWCOMMOTIONThis Week Featuring: METROFRIDAY • APRIL 8 • 9:30 PM-1IDA NOYES THEATREREFRESHMENTS PROVIDEDA Project of The Student Government Activities CommitteeFunded by SGFC2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983Recommendations forQuantrell soughtThe Office of the Dean of the College hassent letters to students soliciting writtenrecommendations of professors for theQuantrell Award for Excellence in Under¬graduate Teaching. This annual award in¬cludes a certificate that is presented duringSpring Convocation and a cash stipend.Dean of the College Donald Levine re¬quests that students who make a recommen¬dation include detailed discussions of the in¬structors’ merits. All instructors areeligible including advisors for independentstudy, lecturers, and discussion-style teach¬ers. Recommendations will be consideredby a faculty committee and final nomina¬tions made to President Gray.Letters of recommendation should be ad¬dressed to the Dean of the College, Harper247. The deadline is Apr. 28.Petitions readyfor SG candidatesStudent Government elections will be heldApril 19 and 20. Petitions are availabletoday in the SG office for those wishing torun for any elected office — president, vice-president, secretary, Finance Committeechairman, representatives for all dormito¬ries and graduate divisions. Petitions aredue April 13. For more information, contactthe SG office at 753-3273, on the third floor ofIda Noyes Hall.Observe HolocaustcommemorationThe Hyde Park-Kenwood Council of Jew¬ish Organizations will observe the Comme¬moration of the Holocaust Sunday at 4 p.m.with a program of readings and music for Yom ha-Shoah, at Chicago Sinai Congrega¬tion, 5350 S. Shore Dr.The Council represents the AkibaSchechter Jewish Day School, B’nai B’rithHillel at the University of Chicago, Congre¬gation Rodfei Zedek, Chicago Sinai Congre¬gation, the Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter, K.A.M. Isaiah Israel Congregationand the South Side Council of Jewish Elder¬ly-- The Public is invited to attend.Therapy groupsoffered by CollegeThis quarter interested students will beable to participate in short-term, issue-fo¬cused therapy groups. These groups willmeet once a week on Wednesday or Thurs¬day afternoons from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. untilthe end of the quarter. The groups will belimited in size to 10-12 members. They willmeet in Harper Library.Groups will be formed around the follow¬ing issues depending on student interest:1) Problems with relationships2) Effects of serious family disruption —i.e., illness, death, divorce3) Problems of procrastination and per¬fectionism4) Consumption problems — alcohol, food,drugsThe groups will be conducted by Dr.Morris Goldman and Dr. Daniel Wyma ofthe department of psychiatry at the Univer¬sity. The groups are being offered by the Of¬fice of the Dean of Students of the Collegeand the department of psychiatry, throughStudent Mental Health.If you think such a group might be usefulto you in clarifying or resolving some per¬sonal problems then you are encouraged tocall for further information. The person tocall is Caryle Perlman at 962-8627.JOHN QUEENANPost-Baccalaureate Premedical RecruiterforBRYN MAWR COLLEGEwill meet with students interested inpursuing studies that will lead to anM.D. DegreeThursday, April 14, from 2 to 5 p.m.Career Counseling Office5706 South University Avenue5-year Post-Baccalaureate/MD Programs with: Dartmouth Medical SchoolHanemann Univesity School of Medicine, The Medical College of Penn¬sylvania, The University of Rochester School of Medicine.For information, appointments, call: 962-7042THE 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 *Beauty Shop•Barbershop •T.J.'s Restaurant•Dentist *Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMr. Keller 752*3800 News in briefConservative law symposiumThe Federalist Society, a group of conser¬vative law students, faculty and lawyersfrom across the nation, will hold a sympo¬sium on judicial activism April 8 and 9 at theUniversity of Chicago Law School. Speakerswill examine growth in the scope and degreeof judicial power initiated by the WarrennCourt and exemplified by recent decisionssuch as Roe vs. Wade.The second annual symposium, entitled“Judicial Activism: Problems and Re¬sponses,” will feature several of the Reaganappointees to the bench. Richard Posner,judge for the United States Circuit Court ofAppeals for the Seventh Circuit, will speakon “The Nature of Judicial Self-Restraint.”Robert Bork, former Solicitor General of theUnited States, both now judges for the Unit¬ed States Circuit Court of Appeals for theDistrict of Columbia, will also make presen¬tations. All have been mentioned as poten¬ tial supreme Court nominees.Specific topics include the withdrawal ofcourt jurisdiction as proposed in right-to-lifeand busing bills, the Supreme Court’srewriting of the Constitution under the guiseof interpretation, and judicial review ofagency and executive decisions such as thedecision striking down the Department ofTransportation’s rescission of its airbagsregulations. The symposium at Chicago willinclude opening remarks by GerhardCasper, dean of the University of ChicagoLaw School, and a banquet.The Federalist Society for Law and PublicPolicy Studies is a national coalition of con¬servative law students, faculty, and lawyerswith chapters at Yale, Chicago, Harvard,and Stanford, and 61 other law schools TheFederalist Society sponsors annual sympo¬sia to encourage discussion amongmembers of the legal community.Gender in religion topic of conferenceA conference on “Perceptions of Gender:Masculine and Feminine in the Study of Re-"ligion” will take place April 11-13 at the uni¬versity of Chicago. The U of C DivinitySchool will host the conference.Anne Carr, associate professor of Chris¬tian theology at the Divinity School, will de¬liver the keynote address at 7 p.m. April 11.She will discuss “The Scholarship ofGender: The Search for the Difference.” Areception will follow at 8 p.m.At 10 a.m. April 12, Peggy Reeves Sanday,associate professor of anthropology at theUniversity of Pennsylvania, will lecture on“The Symbolism of Evil and the Subordina¬tion of Women.” Robin Lovin, associate pro¬fessor of ethics and society at The DivinitySchool, will respond.At 1:30 p.m., Yale University professor ofhistory John Boswell will speak on “Womenand the Development of Christian Doctrine:How ‘Catholic’ a Tradition?” A responsewill be given by Rosemary RadfordRuether, professor of theology at Garrett- Evangelical Theological Seminary. At 4p.m., Judith Van Herik, associate professorof religious studied at The PennsylvaniaState University, will lecture on “FromThinking About Gender in Religion to Think¬ing with Gender About Religion.” MaryKnutsen, PHD student in theology at The Di¬vinity School, will respond.On April 13, University of Washington pro¬fessor of history Caroline Walker Bynumwill speak at 10 a.m. on “The Importance ofPerspective: A Medievalist’s Critique of Re¬cent Feminist Notions of ‘Gender’ and‘Asymmetry.’” Eva Hooker, C.S.C., asso¬ciate dean of faculty of St. Mary’s College,will respond. At 1:30 p.m., a panel will dis¬cuss “Integrating Perceptions of Genderinto the Study of Religion.”The conference will take place in SwiftHall, 1025 East 58th Street. AJ1 sessions arefree and open to the public. Further infor¬mation can be obtained from Janet I. Sum¬mers, 962-8230.AS HUMScmmar Scrus 1982-83The Program in the Liberal Arts and SciencesBasic w Hunuin Bioloay and Medicinepresents a lecture on,Uninformed Consent:Wlnit the PhysicianPocsnT Know Can Kill YouGeorge]. AnnasProfessor of Law and MedicineBoston University School of/MediantThursday, April h, >9837:30 p.m. m Harper 130cAlf laterest?f persons are invitectto attend.There will be a reception with the speakerla Harper 13+ followuuj the lecture.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8 1983—3The Chicago Debating SocietyandThe American ParlimentaryDebate Associationproudly presentTHE AMERICAN NATIONALPARLIAMENTARY DEBATECHAMPIONSHIPSaturday, April 9thFINALS: 7 P.M. • MANDEL HALLSEMI-FINALS: 3:30 P.M. • IDA NOYES(The audience has a vote indetermining the national champions)Funded through the generosity of theAxe - Houghton Foundation andSGFC4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983InterviewSociologist Wilson on the Chicago mayoral raceBy Dan FriedrichWilliam Julius Wilson, one of the blackprofessors at the University, is the LucyFlower Professor of Urban Sociology in thedepartment of sociology and the College. Aformer chairman of the department, Wilsonhas published several books on racial rela¬tions, including Power, Racism, and Privi¬lege, Through Different Eyes: Black andWhite Perspectives on American Race Re¬lations, and The Declining Significance ofRace. The last of these has been a subject ofcontroversy for its thesis that class has be¬come more important than race in deter¬mining black access to privilege and power,and that while educated blacks are now en¬tering positions of prestige and influence,“the black underclass is in a hopeless stateof stagnation. ”The following is taken from an interviewwith Wilson April 1, 1983.Question (Friedrich): What are your gener¬al reflections on the meaning of this elec¬tion? *Answer (Wilson): One meaning is whetheror not a black can become mayor of a cityduring periods of an economic downturn,where there is an election during a periodof severe economic dislocation. If a blackcan be elected under those conditions, Ithink it’s a very significant development.Q: How would that victory stand in terms ofthe history of black mayors?A: I have not carefully researched this par¬ticular problem, but it is my impressionthat most of the elections of black mayorstook place during periods when the econ¬omy was growing, not during a period ofno growth. Although there are signs nowthat the gross national product is up a bit,basically people are still reeling from themassive economic dislocations created byprolonged recessions. And when you havesituations like this, racial fears and ten¬sions are much more likely to come to theforefront. In a city like Chicago, which isone of the most racially and ethnically se¬gregated cities in the country, there is thebasis for incipient racial fears and ten¬sions. When you have a problem wherepeople are barely making ends meet be¬cause the econony is not functioning, itmakes it a very difficult time to have amunicipal election.It’s interesting to contrast Chicago withPhiladelphia. Philadelphia — a lot of peo¬ple don’t realize — also has a blackmayoral candidate named Wilson Goodewho’s running against Frank Rizzo.Q: Who has endorsed Epton?A: Yes, and oddly enough race has not be¬come a significant issue in that campaign.Wilson has been able to maintain his leadover Rizzo and in fact increased it some¬what.So the question people should ask is — andthis gets back to your question about thegeneral themes that come out of this —why is race such a significant issue in Chi¬cago and not in Philadelphia? And I thinkit has to do with a number of factors.Number one is, both cities are affected bythe decline in the economy but in Philadel¬phia while the declining manufacturingindustries have created some dislocationin neighborhoods, the growth of service in¬dustries has brought in a lot of white pro¬fessionals who tend to be liberal, anti-Rizzo, and pro-Wilson Goode. Now theunique thing about this is that these peopleare living in the central city of Philadel¬phia, whereas a lot of professional whitescome to the Chicago area and live in thesuburbs and therefore are not voters. AndWilson Goode has made significantinroads into this group and he probablywill come up with more than a third of thewhite population supporting him if cur¬rent trends continue. That’s one thing.Another thing is that Rizzo, surprisinglyenough, has only recently begun to injectrace into the campaign, only recently hastried to exploit racial fears. But in Chica¬go you have a central city which has beenabandoned by middle income whites andthe whites who tend to remain are eitherthe exclusive whites who live along the la-kefront or those in Hyde Park, or thosepoor, economically marginal whites in theethnic enclaves. And because the ethniccommunities are so heavilv segregated they have little contact with blacks — in¬deed, little contact with the rest of thecity. They tend to live and almost die intheir communities. So you have the basisthere for racial tensions. If the economywere expanding, these tensions would re¬main incipient. But with the downturnthey become manifest. Therefore, whencandidates focus on personalities ratherthan on the issues that affect the city,that’s fuel. Focusing on a candidate’s pastor on his character, you just fuel these ra¬cist perceptions and hostilities.Now Epton may want to argue that there’snothing racist about talking about Wash¬ington’s past problems. But when youhave a racially polarized city, then anykind of suggestion of improper behaviorcan reinforce, heighten racist perceptionsabout blacks. You’re contributing to theracial hostilities of the city, whether yourealize it or not. Therefore, it would havebeen much healthier if the campaign hadbegun by focusing on the major issues ofthe city, like unemployment and deliveryof health care — things of this sort that af¬fect all the citizens. So you have the situa¬tion of the downturn in the economy, theheavily segregated ethnic enclaves, andpolitical rhetoric that emphasizes the per¬sonal characteristics as opposed to themajor issues of the city. You have a situa¬tion that’s ripe for a racial explosion.Q: Does the current election represent achange from the primary in these re¬spects?A: Yes, it represents a change in the sensethat in the primary there was much morediscussion — well people tended to focuson Mayor Byrne, that’s true — but therewas much more attention then given to theissues than on personal or past behavior.And again race was a factor — it has to bea factor, given the very nature of the Chi¬cago community and the state of the econ¬omy — but it’s been exploited in the pres¬ent campaign.Q: Now in The Declining Significance ofRace you say that, at least in terms ofsome dimensions, it’s difficult to speak ofone black community. Let’s assume that’strue. How will that affect this election?A: Well, it won’t affect this election at all be¬cause I’ll tell you one thing this electionhas done: it has incredibly diminishedclass as a relevant variable in this elec¬tion. Blacks will overwhelmingly, regard¬less of class positions, support Washing¬ton.Q: Will they turn out?A: Oh, yes. They’ll turn out in recordnumbers, first, because it is now clear tothem that the election is going to be fairlyclose. Mayor Byrne did a lot to eliminatecomplacency, first when she entered; thatangered a lot of people. And then againwhen she withdrew and people startedtalking about, “Now Epton can mobilizeforces, his campaign has been rejuvenat¬ed.’’ That made a lot of blacks aware thatthis election should not be taken for grant¬ed. So I expect an extremely large turnoutin the black community.Now, you see, class issues will divide mid¬dle class blacks and lower class blacks onsome issues. But when you have a cam¬paign that is so blatantly racial in over¬tones, race supercedes class. Your senseof group position as a black person will re¬ceive much more attention than yourclass position.And the issues of race and class are notclear. Epton has not really defined theissues in such a way that you can identify,in class terms, which direction he’llmove.Q: Do you think he has made a consciousstrategy of leaving his positions on issuesvague?A: Yes. I think he feels that the best way towin this election is to put Washington onthe defensive and I think he’s been devot¬ing most of his time to that strategy. Nowthat’s just my opinion. I don’t know whyhe hasn’t paid more attention to theissues, other than I think he feels the bestway to win is to bring out these issuesabout Washington’s past. But it is strangethat he’s devoting so much of his attentionto that and so little attention to thebroader issues that affect the city. And maybe he has decided that it is better tokeep the broader, more important issuesvague so that he’s not put on the spot.Q: Has Washington contributed to the racialcharacter of the campaign?A: I think that since he was elected he hasmade incredible overtures to the whitecommunity in the sense that he has goneto the white community to campaign, hehas addressed a lot of white groups. Idon’t know if he could do much more thanhe did once he got the primary. You seewhen he was running in the primary, hehad to solidify his base of support, so Iwould have been surprised if he didn’tfocus his attention on that. But once hewon the primary I have the impressionthat he did reach out and I don’t know ifthe media has been covering this as ac¬curately as it ought to. But I have the im-William J. Wilsonpression that he is reaching out in variousquarters, but maybe not as vigorously assome people would like.Q: Is that just a reflection of realities? Be¬cause of the numbers, Epton in theorycould win with a purely white vote. Wash¬ington probably can’t win with a purelyblack vote.A: No, he can’t. But it’s interesting thatEpton has not campaigned on the SouthSide. Epton has not addressed any of theissues that blacks are concerned about —the issues of racial discrimination, affir¬mative action, these sorts of things. It’s asif to say that he’s written off the black votecompletely. And some say, “Well I can un¬derstand why he would do that.’’ But be¬cause he has not reached out to the blackcommunity, I think that he has done moreto heighten racial tensions and to contri¬bute to the polarization of the city thanWashington has.Q: Do you think Washington has made amistake by not returning Epton’s favorand attacking him on the psychiatric careissue?A: No. I think he’s been very shrewd in notdoing that.Q: Would the public perception of what thatmeant differ from the perception of whatWashington’s past problems mean?A: No. But you see, first of all, Washingtondoesn’t have to do it. The reporters aredoing it. And I think the fact that he is notidentified with this, removed from it, en¬hances his own status and character. AndI think that if he were to get involved inthat kind of thing we could come veryclose to some sort of racial explosion inthe city. The campaign is bitter enough asit is. And I’m very pleased that he hasn’tstooped to that.Q: Do you think that Epton’s strategy- mightbackfire?A: I think the strategy will backfire in thelong run. Right now it seems to be work¬ing. But I think it’s going to backfire and Ithink that you’re going to see a shift in theresults of opinion polls. A lot of whites whoare on the borderline, who could go eitherway, are going to slip over to the Washing¬ton column if he continues the present pos¬ture of reaching out and trying to defusethe racial issue and not talking about thepersonal characteristics of his opponent. I think that a lot of people are thinkingabout what is fair and what is not fair andI think thhat Washington is going to comeout a winner because of that. I don’t thinkEpton is going to be able to sustain thekind of campaign that he’s developed.Q: Some political analysts have made anissue of Washington’s entourage being,they say, not racially integrated andtherefore part of the polarization prob¬lem. Is there any merit in that?A: I have not paid much attention to his en¬tourage. I do know that there are a lot ofwhites working in his campaign .... Buthe started out with people in the blackcommunity who were pushing him to runfor mayor and he couldn’t just cast thosepeople aside once he won the primary.Whether or not his encourage remainspredominantly black, I just don’t know. Ithink that for public image it wouid begood if he had a few whites included.Q: What is your sense of how the machine isaligning itself here?A:Well I think it’s supporting Washingtonbut providing lukewarm support. I thinkwe’re seeing the last days of the ma¬chine.Q: So you’re not part of the group that saysif Washington wins we’ll see a black-domi¬nated machine?A: No. I really believe that the machine ison its last legs. It may not dissolve imme¬diately but I think it’s going to graduallyfade away under a Washington adminis¬tration.Q: Because of his election specifically? Orbecause of maybe that and other factorseroding the machine?A: Well, I think that what’s eroding it rightnow is that so many of the machine politi¬cians are going for Epton, the fact thatWashington may come to realize that hedoes not need the machine to deliver thevote for him, because he may carry-through what he said he was going to doand that’s to place less emphasis on ma¬chine politics and carry out some reforms.If that indeed happens — and I don’t seehow he could go back on that because peo¬ple would be watching very- closely — then1 think we’re seeing the beginning of theend of the machine in Chicago.Q: Let’s take both scenarios — Epton win¬ning and Washington winning. What’s theimpact of the election?A: Well, if Washington wins, it will be thebest thing for the city of Chicago becauseit will make people aware that their fearswere unfounded. And I suspect that Chi¬cago would go the way of Detroit, Atlanta,Los Angeles and these other major citieswhere a black took over as mayor, wherethe black mayor reached out to thebroader community. Concerns and fearswere allayed, the business communitywas brought back in, and whites came torealize that they really had nothing to fearafter all. And I think this would be a goodthing.I also think it would be a good thing be¬cause it would mean that Illinois, whichdepends so heavily on Chicago, will becarried by the Democrats in 1984 and Illi¬nois is a key state.If Epton wins it the Republicans have abase of operations here that they- couldpossibly exploit and Illinois could be lost.And if Reagan is running again, that is anajor loss. So this race has implicationsfor the national election. Now that’s onething.The other thing if Epton wins: Some peo¬ple will interpret his victory as an indica¬tion that racism is alive and well, regard¬less of how accurate such a perception is.And I think that it will generate a lot ofconcern nationwide. And I think it will em¬bitter people in Chicago, particularlyblacks, because they will have felt thathere’s a man who if he had been whitewould have won hands dowii and here’s aRepublican candidate who no one tookseriously at all, and he’s suddenly mayor.And thoughtful people certainly don’t en¬dorse him — The Chicago Sun-Times, TheChicago Tribune, the major T V. stations.I mean these people know; they’rethoughtful, astute people. And if someonelike this becomes mayor, then it reallyContinued on page 23The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983—5LettersU of C neglects handicappedTo the editor:On Mar. 9, 1983, the University of Chicagostarted constructing a stair lift to accommo¬date my wheelchair in the SSA building.This lift will only allow me access to theupper four classrooms on the east side of theSSA building. The lift at this time is not com¬pleted.I hope the University community realizesthat this stair lift should not be interpretedas meeting the legal requirements for theprogram to be accessible to disabled per¬sons. I am unable to get an adequate educa¬tion in a program that has so far denied meaccess to the majority of SSA educationalprograms and faculty offices. It has, howev¬er, been encouraging to see the outpouringof concern expressed by the students, facul¬ty, and alumni.The school of Social Service Administra¬tion appears to be impotent to move the Uni¬versity Administration in the direction ofmaking the program physically accessibleto wheelchairs as well as any other disabledperson.While enrolled at SSA, I have seen noother person in a wheelchair attending theUniversity. If the desire was there for an¬other wheelchair bound individual to attendthe U of C, it would be next to impossible forthat person to get to his classroom, let alonereceive that quality education that the Uni¬versity has been known nationwide to pro¬vide.Where is the conscience of the Universi¬ty?It is evident that this problem is not con¬fined to SSA alone, but I don’t have the pre¬cious time to waste waiting for SSA to bemade totally accessible to me. After all, theMaster’s Program lasts only but two years.Almost one year has passed.Why not settle for a chair lift? Becausewe’re talking long term total accessibility ofall levels, and not the short term availabilityof a stair lift to accommodate me to oneclassroom area for one year. Logic is beingwasted. The installation of an elevator is thebest and the most logical way to achievelong term accessibility. Where the lift lessthan halfway meets the needs of one, an ele¬vator can fully meet the needs of many; able bodied as-well as disabled.The University accepted me as a studentfully cognizant of my disability; therefore, Ihave the right to participate in the full rangeof educational programs through SSA or anyother associated programs, expecting that Ior any other disabled student, professor, orguest can have full access to the school.I am not going to take this standing up!Jeffry L. EllisStudent in School ofSocial Service AdministrationCommunity concernedwith Salvador issueTo the editor:We share responsibility for the effects ofour military aid to El Salvador. Already theuniversity community has expressed itsconcern on this issue: in the first threeweeks of winter quarter, 1400 students, fac¬ulty and staff petitioned for the suspensionof all military aid due to gross and continuedviolations of human rights. This petition wasthen published, and copies sent to PresidentReagan, former Business School DeanGeorge Schultz, and University trusteeCharles Percy.Now President Reagan requests 110 mil¬lion additional tax dollars in military aid toEl Salvador, while rejecting negotiations fora peaceful settlement. Among the effects ofour military involvement is an acute needfor medical aid. This quarter, CAUSE, to¬gether with the Social Action CoordinatingCommittee of the Cluster of TheologicalSchools, will participate in the nationwidemedical aid campaign originated by EdAsner. Proceeds from the campaign buymedical supplies in Mexico City under thedirection of former Archbishop Sergio Men¬dez Arceo. Supplies then are sent to popularhealth clinics of the F.D.R. (DemocraticRevolutionary Front). These clinics, wefeel, represent the surest way to reach thosewho are in need, and provide care for the in¬digent on both sides of the civil war.Among the events scheduled for this cam¬paign are a dance April 30 at the Lutheran EditorialsWashington the bestfor all ChicagoansIn next Tuesday’s municipal general elections, the Maroon endorses themayoral candidacy of Harold Washington, and the re-election of 4th Ward Aider-man Timothy C. Evans. While both Washington and Evans have flaws in theirpast records, their abilities to serve their constituents in the next four yearsoutweigh those of their opponents.In his service as a state representative and a representative to Congress,Washington has assembled a fine progressive record which should continue asmayor. His agenda for the city includes realistic proposals to deal with the city’shidden $110 million budget deficit, and his proposals for economic developmentcommissions should serve the city well in bringing jobs and industry to Chi¬cago.Washington’s Republican opponent, Bernard Epton, has made one of the mostserious efforts to bring Republicans into City Hall in 20 years. Under ordinarycircumstances, such an effort should be encouraged, as two-party representa¬tion would help to increase city government efficiency. However, the circum¬stances facing Chicago this election are extraordinary. An Epton victory wouldnot mark a re-birth of Republican ideology in this Democratic bastion, but wouldbe seen as a rejection of Washington due to his race, and therefore mark Chicagoas one of the most racist cities in the nation. Such a distinction could only causethis city great economic harm as businesses would avoid locating here to steerclear of a tense social climate.Washington does have troubling past legal difficulties, but it remains doubtfulthat Epton could put together a coalition in the all-Democratic City Council togovern Chicago. This being the case, we endorse Washington with the hope thathe will live up to his progressive promises, and fairly represent all the people ofChicago after this fragmenting election.We again endorse Timothy Evans for 4th Ward Alderman, noting the reasonswe did in endorsing him in the first round, including his growing independence,his legislation, and his efforts to deal with problems in a ward which may be toobig for any one alderman. Evans does have blemishes on his past record, and webelieve that he may have been too closely tied to the Regular Democratic Orga¬nization in cases when it was clearly wrong. However, his recent record points tothe promise of an effective alderman who can operate independently of both theRegular Democratic Organization and the Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organization in always acting in the best interests of the4th Ward. Toni Preckwinkle is a highly qualified candidate, and her electionwould not hurt the ward, but we believe that the 4th Ward can gain more byEvans’ next term than Preckwinkle’s first.School of Theology and a coffee house May 5at the Blue Gargoyle. You will find collec¬tion boxes in locations around the campus,and volunteers are needed for door-to-doorcanvassing at the end of April. Although ourschoolwork and jobs keep us all busy, wehope to reach out to a broad section of theUniversity community. Checks should bemade payable to Medical Aid Fund andmailed to CAUSE, Ida Noyes Hall. To helpor for further information please call John(363-4961) or David (241-6132), or come tothe Thursday night meetings at Ida Noyes.There is no question of our being involved oractive regarding El Salvador: morally wealready are involved because we share re¬sponsibility for our military aid. Actively wemust oppose it, and actively we must helpwith medical aid.CAUSE(Committee Assembled to Unite in Solidari¬ty With El Salvador)Leave propagandato Malibu schoolsTo the editor:I’m having trouble figuring out which oftwo recent publications on campus is themore realistic. Does anyone out there hon¬estly believe that the “corporate rhetoric”(thanks, former Dean Smith) of our flashynew University of Chicago Magazine’sSpring cover story “When ‘Reg Rats’Revel” is any more accurate than theBrooksian rhetoric (no offense intended tothe non-Brooks Maroon’s April Fool’s Day“Guide for Prospective Students”? The firstgives the propagandistic impression thatwild parties and rock concerts are nightlyevents at the U of C, while the second satir¬ically reminds us of the other side of thecoin. Unfortunately, one of them was not in¬tended to be funny.If you want to start keeping score on thequestion of accuracy, however, the first10,000 points undoubtedly go to the Maroonfor its now twice-verified assertion that “weare exceptionally tiresome on the subject ofourselves.” Please, let’s go back to the goodold respectable days when we let people fig¬ure out for themselves what life here is like and what they will be able to make of it, andleave the propaganda to the schools in Mali¬bu. After all, we academics don’t really carewhat The New York Times thinks, do we?Douglas T. ShapiroSecond-year student in the CollegeHarold’s supportersexpecting too muchTo the editor:In a Maroon article last quarter, DavidBrooks committed the heresy of sayingsomething less than glowing about HaroldWashington and his campaign. Althoughthis article may not have been written in themost tactful manner, the response it gen¬erated helped prove some of the problems itidentified.Brooks contended that Washington is apolitician, not a savior; that he will not workthe miracles his proponents expect. LisaPickens, Curtis Miller, and Yvette Baptistepointedly denied that Washington’s support¬ers are “savior-seekers,” but are more po¬litically mature. They should inform Jac¬ques Morial, who terms Washington a“savior of sorts,” about to rescue Chicagofrom “Plantation Politics.” Responses likethese illustrate the tremendous expecta¬tions which Washington’s supporters havefor him, something perhaps to be expectedfollowing any election. Notably lacking inany of these responses, however, is discus¬sion of any of Washington’s “qualifications”besides race. These and many other sup¬porters of Washington assume that the factof his blackness will in itself produce sweep¬ing changes in the manner in which Chicagois governed.There is simply no way any candidate canmeet expectations as far-reaching as these.Many of Washington’s supporters are des¬tined to experience the same disappoint¬ment felt by supporters of Jimmy Carter fol¬lowing the 1976 Presidential election.Moreover, these responses indicate that the‘‘unity” alleged possible under Washingtonis really “united, as long as you don’t criti¬cize Harold Washington”.Milton PinskyStudent in the Law School6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983Viewpoints‘Human Being and Citizen’ course should be savedBy Chris Hill and Derek JeffreysA great course on this campus is about to be chloro¬formed, and it just doesn’t make sense.If all goes as currently planned, this will be the last yearthat students have a chance to take the course “HumanBeing and Citizen” (HBC) to fulfill their Humanities andSocial Science core requirements. Far from being just an¬other revision in an ever changing course description book,the loss of HBC would be a highly significant and indeedtragic one, for the aims of this course truly typify the spiritand purpose of liberal education at the University of Chi¬cago.HBC, begun six years ago, is a very theoretical coursewhich seeks to define excellence as a human being and ex¬cellence as a citizen through extensive readings and discus¬sions of some of the greatest thinkers of all time: Homer,Plato, Locke, Descartes, Freud, and numerous others.What truly makes the course both powerful and unique,however, is the fact that it is interdisciplinary: it is a fusionof a Humanities section and a Social Sciences section. Thesame students meet together for each section, and both theHum. and Soc. profs attend both sessions. Thus we read anddiscuss the Gospel of St. Matthew side by side with Machia-velli, Antigone with The Republic, Kant with Rousseau. Wecompare and contrast the various works, looking for simi¬larities as well as focusing on differences. We draw connec¬tions which cut across the traditional divisions of “Humani¬ties” and “Social Science” so that we come to view thequestions these authors address as not just the isolatedissues of the philosopher or the politician, but as the univer¬sal concerns of man. In doing so, we ourselves confrontsome of the great questions that all people would do well toconsider.And while the course is rigorous, it is also quite popular.This year, three sections of about 27 students each werefilled almost immediately, and an additional 150 studentswho wanted to take the course had to be turned away!With all this going for it, one would think that such acourse would be due for an expansion, if anything. But ifcurrent plans remain unchanged, HBC in its present inter¬disciplinary form will be eliminated from future course of¬ferings. There will remain a course named “Human Beingand Citizen,” but it will only be a three-hour/week Humani¬ties course with no Soc. professor and its reading list halved— in essence, it will be “Human Being and Citizen” minusthe “Citizen.” There is talk of somehow associating it withPolitical Order and Change. This however would not in¬ clude the Humanities and Social Science “team teaching,”which more than anything else brings about the key inte¬gration of the two fields, and thus the interdisciplinary es¬sence — the real strength of the course — will be lost.So why is the only core course with this potent combina¬tion of Humanities and Social Science being trashed? Onthe surface, the problem lies in the Social Sciences Colle¬giate Division, which has been unable to provide enoughSoc. profs who are willing to teach it. This is due, in largepart, to a belief that HBC does not contain enough “modernsocial science,” such as quantitative economics and sociol¬ogy.While this may or may not be true, we do not find it con¬vincing in the least as a reason for killing the course. HBC isvery theoretical in focus, but much of this is theory that willalways be at the heart of what we know as social science.Such a theoretical approach does not lend itself well to mod¬ern quantitative or technical analysis, but it is just as au¬thentically “social science” nonetheless. Even for thosewho have never wanted to take HBC and never will, thisinvolves an important issue of curricular variety of whichall students should take note. HBC may indeed be more ab¬stract of classical in comparison to, say, “Self, Culture, andSociety” or “Mind,” but we feel that the Core should bebroad enough to allow such a diversity of approaches andlet students choose the one they prefer. The assertion thatHBC’s approach does not adequately constitute “socialscience” is a clear assault on such diversity, for it repre¬sents a harmfully narrow definition of a discipline that hasdeveloped over many centuries and is often inherently theo¬retical in nature.But far from being something that must be defended asan equal, we feel HBC’s approach can be viewed as trulysuperior in terms of the purpose of the Common Core. Gen¬eral Education does not so much mean a “taste” of eachdivision and each of its favored disciplines as it does theimparting of a broad body of knowledge and theory fromthat division which is relevant if not essential to any educat¬ed individual, regardless of major or career. HBC’s themeof asking “what is a good human being and a good citizen”may well be one of the most universally relevant and essen¬tial themes being pursued anywhere on this campus! It ishumanities, it is social science, and yet it also transcendsboth these disciplines in its pursuit of ideas about humanexcellence — a critical pursuit for all men in every profes¬sion. For this reason, we feel that it behooves a fine institu¬tion like the University of Chicago to keep such a courseA modest proposal on how to runBy Jeff DavitzDespite this university’s pervasive sense of detatchmentfrom the material world, we are still obviously bound by themost material and elusive of all things. Money. No doubtincreased class size will mean a more “highly interactivemass action.” But as McDonald’s knows, nobody else willnotice if you cut a sliver or two off of each burger. Money ismoney. And when you come right down to it, if increasingclass size is a little cheaper, academic justification can’t betoo far off.So we’ve got to ask ourselves whether this university isreally squeezing all the money it can out of all the peopleand programs it can. I just don’t know. And with only nineweeks on my tenure left and a near zero balance with thebursar, I have to admit that I’m not going to do a whole lotof work to find out. You won’t either.I do, however, have a modest suggestion, a modest pro¬posal. My proposal is motivated by this nagging feeling I’vehad ever since I learned that Hutchison Commons and theC-shop were due to shut this winter. As I heard it, they justcouldn’t cut it financially. Now I’m not saying it’s true—likeso many other things, I just don’t know. But despite the let¬ters this newspaper may get this week explaining that theC-shop’s closing was a matter of “fiduciary responsibility,”I’ll be stuck with this nagging feeling that the C-shop andthe Commons shut because they went “fiduciarily” out theback door.Just how long can you serve delicious food at reasonableprices? Well, clearly we’ll never know. What we do know isthat the University seems to have flubbed running a nearmonopoloy in a high-demand, low-risk, high-visibility area.There are something like 10,000 people on campus, most ofwhom eat, and only three or four lunch places, and theywent broke. They turned Exxon into the Sandusky Buggy-whip Company.So I began thinking (about time after four years). If theUniversity blew running a lunch and breakfast place, howwell could they be doing in the futures market? Have theyjust purchased the Sandusky Buggywhip Company? Well,at the risk of introducing a self-defeating refrain into thispiece, I have to admit that I don’t know. And again I mustemphasize: I am not going to step on any toes trying to findout. This is my last quarter, and it’s too hard to step on toeswith your feet up all the time. But I do wonder. So my mod¬est proposal:1) Be it noticed that the University is not making all themoney it possibly could.2) Be it recognized that money is better than brains whenyou want a corned beef sandwich.We the undersigned do hereby and lawfully give the Uni¬versity of Chicago to Morry. Yes, that’s right. Morry. The big, happy guy who seemsto be saying ‘shooooooooor” no matter which of his fourplaces you seem to be in. The guy who offers you a dozenbagels and a pint of ice cream to go with your deep-friedsalmon dinner. I don’t know if he’ll ever be catering to LakeForest polo match picnics, but the day that Morry hastwenty-six places in Hyde Park all jammed with employeesshouting “Two-nah. Won Arr Cee” can’t be too far off. Andyou know what? Remember the C-shop? It’s now his. Theattractively colored signs portend: “Soon to come...Morry-land.” There is no stopping this man. Without advertising,without all the usual hoopla surrounding a Morry’s pre¬mier, the old Co-shop was jammed the first day it openedfor business. Oh sure, there was the seductive name—“Morry’s Temporary Food Outlet.” And of course, therewere many of the familiar trappings: jars of carmel candy,hunks of beef dripping in the windows (remember the C-shop, not the field house). But just the same, without warn¬ing Morry suddenly descends and within minutes hisnewest place is jammed. I ordered a two-nah and arr-ceemyself. Morry was now making money at a new location.So give him the University. Of course we’ll have to keepthe professors, students and employees. After all, who elseA plague on bothBy Robert E. JohnsonIt is often erroneously assumed that it is the duty of a citi¬zen to vote. This is false. If our political system presents uswith candidates unworthy of our votes, it is positively un-American to vote. I believe that the candidacies of bothEpton and Washington would not even exist without racismand are hence dubious objects of an ethical voter’s sup¬port.That Washington’s base of support is racist was cleareven in the primary. Of his black supporters I ask: wouldyou even consider voting for such a man if he were white? Aman who “forgot” to file Federal income taxes for nineteenyears? Hopefully not. Yet you are not merely going to votefor Washington — you support his candidacy so enthusiasti¬cally!1 You aren’t merely going to vote Democratic whileholding your noses; instead, you “can’t wait to punch 8.”I’ll bet you could wait if Washington were white. If so, youare voting entirely on the basis of race, and are thus racist.To Washington’s white supporters (who also wouldn’t bevoting for Washington if he were white!) I say: you aretechnically racists but primarily cowards — cowards forrefusing to recognize black racism when you see it and cow¬ards because you are afraid of erroneously being called“racist” if you don’t vote for Washington.That Epton’s base of support is racist has only become available to its students. The “great books” approach ofHBC, with its careful interdisciplinary analysis of greatthought and its broad humanistic concern, representssomething that is uniquely “Chicago.” In a time when com¬peting educational institutions are beginning to look moreand more alike, and many feel that educational standardsin general are slipping, we ought to preserve what makes usdistinctive and excellent.And so, because of the quality of this course’s interdis¬ciplinary approach as well as the need for curricular vari¬ety (particularly since almost one third of this year’s fresh¬man class wanted to take it), we believe that HBC in itscurrent form must not be allowed to die. Many current andformer HBC students have already signed a petition sayingexactly the same thing, but that’s not enough. If you agreethat this course should be saved, we urge you to make yourfeelings known to the members of the Social Sciences Colle¬giate Division, SSCD Master J. David Greenstone, andmost importantly, Dean Levine. We certainly do not sug¬gest that the University should force any professor to teacha course he/she does not want to. We urge the members ofSSCD to exchange ideas with the coordinators of HBC andsee if any modifications in the course can be made whichwill make the course more acceptable to the Soc. profs andyet still preserve its basic focus. If these efforts fail to con¬vince any more of them to teach the course, we stronglybelieve that the College should hire a professor who willwant to do so. Even with its budgetary constraints, we feelthe University can and must find a way to preserve a coursewhich seeksnot only an understanding of certain enduring ques¬tions, but also a deeper appreciation of who we are,here and now, all in the service of a more thoughtfulconsideration of our lives as human beings and citi¬zens.It’s truly unfortunate and somewhat hard to believe thatthe Social Science professors on this campus refuse to teachsuch a course. But the explanation that HBC is ending be¬cause “no one can be found to teachh it” is at best a smoke¬screen. If some sudden epidemic were to kill off all of Chi¬cago’s calculus professors, the University would quickly goout and hire new ones, because calculus is viewed as aworthwhile and important course. Clearly, somewhere,someone has decided that Human Being and Citizen isn’t.That, in the end, is the most unbelievable thing of all.Chris Hill and Derek Jeffreys are first year students inthe College.this universitywill eat at now two, soon six Morry-places on campus? Howcan you run a campus without people who eat lunch anddrink coffee? But give him the University. Let nim run thebursar’s office and the registrar’s office. Let him run theplant department and Argonne Laboratory. I guaranteeyou that within a couple of weeks tops the University will bejammed with students, a lot of good lunch places, andwhole stockings-full of money. Then we’ll be able to hirethat Sanskrit cartoonist from Pakistan. Then we’ll be ableto have visiting fellows who need no seven-page introduc¬tion in the Maroon. Maybe we’ll even get to discuss the se¬mester system. Hell! More school, more lunches is whatI’ve always said.A modest proposal. I don’t think it’s a bad one either. Canyou imagine Morry registering students? “Social Sciences122! Anything else? Human Being and Citizen?! Shoooooor!Step on down! Have a nice day!” It’s all too exciting toimagine. I’m under no illusions, though. I don’t think theUniversity will do it. It’s too radical an idea. Sort of like thedouble-compartmentalized dishwasher, or the combinationblender-shaver—an idea that makes us all hope, but onewhose time has not yet come.Jeff Davitz is a student in the collegeparty housesclear since the primary. He had not a ghost of a chance ofvictory until his opponet turned out to be black. It cannoteven be argued that Epton is an unwilling recipient of racistsupport, since his advertisements search for “sudden con¬verts to Republicanism” in such an obvious manner: “votefor Epton — BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE!” As they say inparts of Los Angeles, ugrody to the max, Bemie!”If Epton wins, the victory will be Pyrrhic, for Chicago in1983 will look like Democratic Texas in 1928 voting for Re¬publican Herbert Hoover simply because his opponent, A1Smith, was Catholic. If Washington wins, the victory willseem like Jimmy Carter’s 1976 victory. Southerners — des¬perate to have “one of their own” in the White House —created the margin of victory for a rather mediocre can¬didate, just as Chicago’s blacks may give the Mayor’s job toa law-breaking scoundrel.Perhaps the best message Chicago could give the nationis to have the lowest voter turnout in history. This is onlyfitting in an election where both candidates have been ofsuch low quality. Instead, the voter turnout will probably bethe highest in history, perhaps in an eerie way reflectingthe truth in at least one of Jimmy Carter’s adages — thatthe people deserve a government as good as themselves.Robert E. Johnson is a graduate student in EconomicsThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983—7Cornell Law SchoolUndergraduate Prelaw ProgramJune 6 to July 19, 1983A demanding six-week programfor college students who wantto learn what law school is like.For further information write to Jane G. 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Its built-in prompts also make it one of the easiest touse.” Radio-Electronics (March, 1983; p. 114)For more information or a demonstration,call (evenings)241-6155 (Natalie) 548-1755 (Mike)Mastercharge/Visa accepted. Quantity pricing available.*with parallel printer (not included)BRAND Used desks,chairs, files,and sofas8560 S. Chicag^RE 4-2111EQUIPMENT Open Daily 8:30-5Sat 9-2 The Maroon PrizesThe Chicago Maroon will now be awardingmerit prizes to staff members for best journalisticwork in up to four categories; investigative report¬ing, features, sports, and the Grey City Journal.The selections will be made twice a quarter by theeditor-in-chief in consultation with the editorialboard.These awards carry a stipend of up to $25 each,and will supplement the existing staff scholarships..This SummerAt Cornell University you can enjoy aremarkable variety of courses andlearning opportunities. In a setting ofbeautiful lakes, parks, ravines, andwaterfalls, you can fulfill requirements,accelerate your degree program, orsimply take the courses that you’vealways put off. Ithaca, a smallcosmopolitan city, is located in amagnificent, varied countryside thatoffers you water sports and ball games,climbing and camping, theater andoutdoor concerts, soaring and biking,birding and hiking... Call or write to seefor yourself why Cornell is the place youshould be this summer.Cornell University Summer SessionB12 Ives Hall—Box 15Ithaca, New York 14853607/256-49878—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983GREY CITY JOURNAL8 April 1983 • 15th YearPEOPLE MAKE THEIR OWN FASHIONBUT NOT JUST AS THEY PLEASEby Susan SubakSome time ago I stood against theside wall inside a Carson Pirie Scottdisplay window. The show was “Car¬son’s has it all,” and the star in thewindow was not me but a ratherdumpy mannequin dressed in a pinkand orange housecoat and bandanasitting on a stuffed couch in a comfyliving room eating candy and watch¬ing the daytime soaps. I was a guestof Carson’s visual merchandising de¬partment which puts together thestore windows and interior displays.This window was one of six in thehome furnishings department featur¬ing four stylized middle-aged and el¬derly ladies, a working man, and ayoung man, each in a room fittingtheir personality. From my vantagepoint inside the window I could seethe viewers on the sidewalk. Peoplewalk fast on Wabash; but when theysaw the window, most smiled, manypaused, and occasionally someonestayed and watched television withthe mannequin. Clifford Wright, win¬dow manager, was telling me that hethinks of his work as a visual cartoon.“It’s street theatre.” When streettheatre and happenings bloomed inthe late 1960s, live actors posed onthe sidewalk in front of store win¬dows in a drama performed in com- ®pany with the mannequins inside. In ^Chicago, in 1983, the only regular 2street theatre (aside from the win-1dows) is a zealous preacher who ^stands at the corner of State andWashington in all weather—armed 8with a bullhorn. But people rush by "him with cheerless expressions. -•Perhaps people aren’t used to see- §ing ordinary people—overweight i>mannequins—in a store window, z.Frank Myers, Corporate Director of °Visual Merchandising at Carson’s, 2dates the change from placing only-|“beautiful” women in all the windowsto three years earlier. The departure,at least in the home furnishings de¬partment, is one from overt or subli¬minal erotica to a variety of innova¬tions, focusing in this example oncomfort. Rather than using a sexymannequin to titillate our interest inthe furniture, or showing us what ourstyle should be, the windows tell usthey will fit our style. “Carson’s has itall” contrasts markedly with a contro¬versial display of several years earli¬er. A mannequin in a french maid’suniform huddles in the corner by avacuum cleaner that is “eating dirt”.The cord winds around the maid’slegs. According to Wright, a numberof women complained that the displayportrayed bondage. Wright’s beliefon this subject is that such complaintstell more about the complainers thanthey do about the display. Others inthe Carson window crew openly dis¬closed that displays do indeed makeuse of techniques of subliminal seduc¬tion. Already in the 1960s advertis¬ing industries employed subliminalspecialists who explored such itemsas the phallic possibilities of the frost¬ed champagne bottle.If the french maid at Carson’sprompted outrage, one can onlywonder at the reaction of viewers inthe 1930s to the new kinky chic dis¬play windows. From a study of docu¬mented display windows throughoutthe decades, it is evident that the his¬tory of store windows is the licentiousdepiction of woman and woman¬hood-outdoing other forms of adver¬tisement such as the printed ad andtelevision commercials.From the first advancement of man¬nequin technology from wax figuresin the 1920s, women are depicted as “Some Like It Hot” and we know who theyare.parlour socialites or bedroom objects.Of the hundreds of windows thoughtworthy of inclusion in the severalbooks about store windows on themarket, the women portrayed arealways sexual or social figures savefor the occasional mother. The excep¬tion to this rule came predictably dur¬ing World War II, when for the firsttime American women were en¬couraged to take responsible posi¬tions in the work force. Display win¬dows advertised how women couldhelp the war effort. For instance, awindow in 1943 portrayed womenworking as auxiliary aircraft warn¬ing service volunteers. By the 1950s,however, women were once againplunked down in front of their vani¬ties and told to primp. The period wascharacterized by unprecedentedblandness.The 1960s marked an efflorescenceof kink: Variations on the woman inbed, taking a shower, half-naked re¬clining on an odalisque’s couch posingfor a male artist, wearing only under¬wear rescued by a fireman, in a sailorsuit covered with a fishing net,women slung together with ropes. Inthe 1960s and 1970s women werefeatured smoking and drinking in the“you’ve come a long way baby”poses, providing women with animage of material freedom—which ispseudo emancipation at best. The1970s also found women in activewear, but the mannequin’s postureseemed to call more attention to thesilk boxing shorts than to her athleticability.The denigration of women crested “Carson’s Has It All”in the 1930s, in my opinion, with thewindow displays of Salvador Dali.Take “Narcissus White:” Dali seats ablonde mannequin in a fleece linedbathtub, pink satin lines the walls.Her many disembodied hands holdpocket mirrors which reflect herself, amannequin wrapped in feathers.Tears of blood flow from her eyes,bugs and beetles crawl in her hair."Narcissism, not need, is the shop¬per’s motivation,” said SalvadorDali. The blood and bugs are punish¬ment for her vanity. The window wasnever seen because the managementfound it suggestive (suggestive?) and made changes. Dali reentered thewindow and the bathtub was laterfound on the street, the window bro¬ken. Curiously, the notion that “theappeal of material possessions isoften the appeal to vanity,” wasshared by Marcel Yertes, Tanuy,Andre Breton and Ozenfant. “Narcis¬sus White” is the title of Dali’s win¬dow; “Tartuffism Black” is a phrasethat might befit these artists whobounce between window dressing,photography, cinema and painting,serving morsels about the evils ofbourgeois materialism, while they,continued on page 4Richard Johnson. Gregor McLennan. Bill Schwarz,and Q8$3otton, editors i'O,✓* / N i "V 'Vs ' s '✓ /V \V'\-Sally HumphreysIke Faniy, Wnm, and DSEMINARY COOP BOOKSTO5757 S. UNIVERSITY 752-4381The STUDENT GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIESCOMMITTEE is now compiling a listing of campusand local bands. When completed, it will beavailable to student groups and members of theuniversity community which could lead to futureemployment. To appear on this list, all interestedbands should submit the following:• NAME • DESIRED FEE• NAMES OF MEMBERS • AVAILABILITY• TYPE OF MUSIC • DEMONSTRATION TAPE• PAST EXPERIENCE • EQUIPMENT AVAILABLESo that the list can be made available as soon aspossible, please make all submissions by April 20to:STMT GIVEINMEMT ACTIVITIES 6IIM.■A NSYES HALL • HIM 306ANY NESINNS. CALL MAIN AT M3 B7S /milllMH I II ITTTKTONIGHT at 7, 9, and 11: Join Bob Geldof (of the Boom-town Rats) in Alan Parker’s rock homage to angst,ennui, and broken glass, PINK FLOYD: THEWALL.SATURDAY at 7 and 9:30: The consequences of illicitromance are investigated in Francois Truffaut s THEWOMAN NEXT DOOR, starring Gerard Depardieuand Fanny Ardant.SUNDAY at 8: Bernardo Bertolucci’s early master work,BEFORE THE REVOLUTION, the first of a four-film Bertolucci series co-sponsored by theRenaissance Society of the University of Chicago.All shows arc in Cobb Hall, 5811 So. Ellis.Separate admission is $2.00. “Pink Floyd:The Wall" is rated R; no one under 17 ad¬mitted. The capital of North Dakota isBismark. For more information, call our24-hour filmline, 962-8575, or consultDoc’s authoritative film quarterly, FOCUS!i 111 i r DOC FILMS 17GSB STUDENTS— And Anyone Else Wishing to Save $ On Books —The Phoenix Still Has Books for These Courses:Bio Sci 136Bio Sci 221BehavSci217Business 300Business 303Business 310Business 311 Business 316Business 326Business 340Business 350Business 363Business 365Business 369 Business 371Business 372Business 376Business 380Business 430Chem 263Math 110This is only a sampling, so come in and check outthe Phoenix books selection. Remember, we getnew books every day, so if it wasn’t here yesterdayor last week, it’s still worth one more look at thePhoenix before you shell out megabucks for a newbook.Hours: 9:30 until 6 PM Monday through Friday11:30 until 6 PM on SaturdayPhone: 312-962-8561University of Chicago • Reynolds Club5706 S. University Ave. • Chicago, Illinois 60637JL Hie Gladstone Hotel636 So. Michigan Ave.• Close to the U of C (10 minutes north)• Plan your next conference/meeting or group housing• Special rates for University of Chicago affiliates or visitors,$32.00 single / $37.00 double• 17 conference rooms to accommodate 10-500We now feature the hilarious production of SHEAR MADNESS in the MayfairTheatre, and Joe Segal’s famous JAZZ SHOWCASE in the intimate BlackstoneCafe. (Student discounts - Sunday matinee - 3 pm.)FOR ROOM RESERVATIONS, OR FOR MOREINFORMATION OR TOUR & PRESENTATION, CALLNATALIE VITEK, DIRECTOR OF SALES427-4300 5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails* Plsasant Dining • Pick-Up"Chicago’s best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977"The ultimate in pizza!” — Now York Tlmaa, January 19802—FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALART >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>> > > > > >> >*>>>>>>11 |>>>>>>>>>>>>>>MUSICThe Guarnerl String Quartet will presenta concert this evening. Very fewseats remain and they will be on saleat the Box Office one hour precedingthe concert. Tickets are $10 (UC stu¬dent, $6.50). tonight, Fri, April 8 at8 pm in Mandel Hall.Soprano Suzanne Scherr with pianistRichard Carnes and members of theUniversity Symphony Orchestra,Barbara Schubert, conductor, willpresent an All-Wagner concert. Thisconcert is presented in celebration ofthe 1983 centenary of Wagner’sdeath. Ms. Scherr will perform theWesendonck Lieder, and the USOwill perform Siefried Idyll. Thurs,April 14 at 12:15 pm in GoodspeedRecital Hall. Free.Holly Near and Ronnie Gilbert are begin¬ning their national tour at People'sChurch, 941 W. Lawrence, Fri, April8, with two concerts at 7:30 and10:30 pm. Tickets $10.50 and $9.Daniel Buren Works in situ. Opens Sun10 Apr, 5-7 at The Renaissance Soci¬ety Bergman Gallery, 4th floorCobb. Through 4 May: Tue-Sat, 10-4;Sun, noon-4. 962-8670. Free.Medieval and Renaissance CeramicsThrough 24 Apr at the Smart Gal¬lery, 5550 Greenwood. Tue-Sat,10-4; Sun, noon-4. 753-2123. Free.Fantastic Visions For Chicago Imagists,fantasy emerges as a genre of paint¬ing within which direct expression isfound for intensely personal reac¬tions to contemporary life. Amongthe six artists shown, Jim Lutes’images most directly concern them¬selves with the life of the artistand/within the life of the city. In“Mr. Business,’’ 1983 Lutes paints adistorted face of a tough, believablycorrupt property owner in front of abackdrop of a city block — tene¬ments, store fronts, and billboards.The image is perhaps more real thanfantasy, the statement is simultan¬eously political and emotional bothin its presentation and in its effect.Susan Bloch’s painted ladies slitherthrough the night streets, downalleys, through subway stations,and in smoke filled bars. Red, long,geometric forms of women alone inthe city. Imaginary women, charac¬terizations of glamour infected byisolation and chill. Ellen Levin turnsto Rousseau-like jungle images.Naked men and women and hugegreen leaves form undulating pat¬terns across the canvases. Alternat¬ing acts of aggression and love be¬tween couples emerge and recedebehind the foliage. Contemporaryrelationships transported, imaginedand allegorized. More life felt, fan¬tasized, and expressed in the paint¬ings of Bill Benway, and Tony Kaz-lauckas, and in the paintedconstructions of Christine O’Conner.Closes tomorrow at The Hyde ParkArt Center, 1701 E 53rd. 11-5.324-5520. Free. — LKLarry Day Realist painter from Phila¬delphia speaks on Thur 14 Apr at 2at Midway Studios, 6016 Ingleside.753-4821. Free.Hyde Park Women’s History Exhibit.Through 29 May at the HP HistoricalSociety, 5529 Lake Park. Sat, 10-noon; Sun, 2-4. Free.Perspectives on Contemporary RealismSeventy-nine drawings, gouaches,and watercolors by 54 living Ameri¬cans. Through 28 May at the Art In¬stitute, Michigan at Adams. Mon- And one can isms used tothe work of art once and for all above all classes WQ ideologies. The same idealismand apolitical Man which the prevalent bourgeois ideology wWd like us to believe in and also points to the eternalpreserve. —Daniel BurenDaniel Buren at work at the Renaissance Society on Wednesday; text from “Function of the Museum”, 1970.Wed, Fri, 10:30-4:30; Thur, 10:30-8;Sat, 10-5; Sun, noon-5. 443-3500.Admission discretionary exceptThur, free.Paul Strand Medium-sized showing ofcontemporary and vintage prints,often both from the same negative.Through 24 Apr at the Art Institute;info above.In the Fields Photographs of Californiafarm workers. Through 23 Apr at Co¬lumbia College, 600 S Michigan.Mon-Fri, 10-5; Sat, noon-5.663-1600 ext 104. Free.Naive and Outsider Painting from Ger¬many. An exciting collection of 123artworks from 47 German naive ar¬tists. Many of the paintings make astrong social comment, depictingscenes from daily life, war, andwork in industrial plants. Though theimages the artists use have a child¬like simplicity, they are exuberantlycolored and surprisingly animated.Also showing is a selection of blackand white photographs and collagesusing photographs, postcards, andthree-dimensional objects by Ken¬neth Josephson. Rather than justproviding an eye to his environment,Josephson manipulates his subjectmatter and often creates a humor¬ous juxtaposition of objects in hisworks. Both through 22 May at theMuseum of Contemporary Art, 237 EOntario. Tue-Sat, 10-5; Sun, noon-5.280-2660. $2 except Tue, free.—WSGroup Show Judy Hartle, paintings;Anna Horvath, constructions; NancyPlotkin, sculpture; Mary Jo Vath,paintings; Maureen Warren, paint¬ings. Opens tonight, 5-8 at ArtemisiaGallery, 9 W Hubbard. Through 30Apr: Tue-Sat, 11-5. 751-2016. Free. Les Levine Billboards, photographs,drawings. Opens tonight, 5-8 atN.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W Hubbard.Through 30 Apr: Tue-Sat, 11-5.467-6550. Free.Four Be One Sculpture installation bySharon Vincent Porter; The BoundTree Series, drawings by Joyce Re¬bora; and an installation by NeelWebber. Opens tonight, 5-8 at ARCGallery, 6 W Hubbard. Through 30Apr: Tue-Sat, 11-5. 226-7607. Free.Artpolice Exhibit opens tomorrow, 6-9at Randolph Street Gallery, 756 NMilwaukee. Through 9 May: Tue-Sat, 11-5. 243-7717. Free. Artpoliceperformance, tomorrow at 9, $3: $2students.The Game Show Performance by AliciaHealy. Tonight, tomorrow, and Sunat 8 at NAB Gallery, 331 S Peoria.733-0886. $3.James Grigsby Painting and sculpture.Opens tonight, 6-8 at MoMing, 1034W Barry. 472-9894. Free. Perfor¬mances by Grigsby tonight, tomor¬row, and Sun at 8:30. $5.Street Scenes Photographs by JohnProbes tonight only, 5:30-8 at theTerry residence, 3648 N Racine.Free.Michael Goldberg and Lynn Umlauf.Paintings. Through 10 May at YoungHoffman Gallery, 215 W Superior.Tue-Sat, 10-5:30. 951-8828. F:-ee.Group Show opens new Phyllis Kindspace at 313 W Superior tonight.642-6302.MISCGrey City Journal 4/8/83Staff: John Andrew, Abigail Asher, Curtis Black, Pat Cannon, John Con-Ion, Steven Diamond, Kathy Kelly, Lorraine Kenny, Bruce King, Made¬leine Levin, Shawn Magee, Marla Martin, Richard Martin, Beth Miller,Maddy Paxman, Sharon Peshkin, Geoff Potter, John Probes, WilliamSanders, Abby Scher, Rachel Shteir, Cassandra Smithies, Susan Subak,Beth Sutter, Barry Waterman.Fiction and Poetry Coordinator: Judith Silverstein.Editorial Board: Stephanie Bacon, Leah Mayes, Vince Michael, Ken Wis-soker.Production: Nadine McGann, David Miller.Editor: Nadine McGann. Kite Flying Contest Sun 10 Apr at thepoint. Free kites. Call Joe,241-6220.An Evening of Love Stories and Poemsperformed by poet Robert Bly andstoryteller/author Gioia Timpanelli.April 8 at 7:30 pm, Galvin Auditori¬um, Mundelein College, 6339 N.Sheridan. $7. On Saturday and Sun¬day April 9-10, Bly and Timpanelliwill conduct workshops on The WildMan and the Wild Woman from 10-4.Both workshops, $100, single $55.C.G. Jung Center, 550 Callan Ave.,Evanston. 475-4848.FILMPink Floyd: The Wall (Alan Parker, 1982) This cinematic adaptation ofThe Wall offers much the same as theoriginal album: profundity for trou¬bled adolescents and musical gratifi¬cation for art-rock poseurs. Addi¬tionally, director Alan Parkeraccomplishes the near impossible bysurpassing even the original albumin torturous heights of self-indul¬gence. In a pastiche of images whichrange from the grotesque to the un¬intentionally hilarious, directorParker and Pink Floyd frontmanRoger Waters manage to trivializenot only the perils of rock and rollstardom, but, in a grievously unfor-giveable sin, rock and roll in gener¬al.At the risk of further antagonizingPink Floyd fans, one final statementfrom a tired listener — frankly, Idon’t give a damn about RogerWaters' unremitting alien¬ation...Tonight at 7, 9, and 11. Doc.$2. — BKThe Woman Next Door (Francois Truf¬faut, 1981) Sat Apr 9 at 7:30 and 9.Doc $2Shadow of a Doubt (Alfred Hitchcock,1943) Sat Apr 9 at 7 and 9:30. LSF.$2.Before the Revolution (Bernardo Berto¬lucci, 1962) Sun Apr 10 at 8. Doc.$2.A Star is Born (George Cukor, 1954)Sun Apr 10 at 8:30. LSF. $2.Maedchen in Uniform (Leotine Sagan,1931) Mon Apr 11 at 7:15. Doc. $2.The Blue Light (Leni Riefenstahl, 1933)Mon Apr 11 at 9. Doc. $2Days of Wine and Roses (Blake Ed¬wards, 1962) Tues Apr 12 at 8. Doc.$2.Mr. Hulot's Holiday (Jaques Tati, 1953)Wed Apr 13 at 7:30. I-House. $2.No Thanksgiving for Red, Any GivenWorld (Eames Demetrios, 1962) Fol¬lowed by a talk by director Deme¬trios. Wed Apr 13 at 8. Doc. $2.The Lavender Hill Mob (Charles Crich¬ton, 1951) Wed Apr 13 at 8:30. LSF.$2.Knife in the Water (Roman Polanski,1962) Thurs Apr 14 at 7:30. I-House.$2.Simplemente Jenny (Helena Solber-Ladd, 1975) Thurs Apr 14 at 8. Doc.$2.Chugiago (Antonio Equino, 1977) ThursApr 14 at 8:30. Doc. $2.San Francisco (W.S. Van Dyke II, 1936)Thurs Apr 14 at 8:30. LSF. $2. Third Annual Chicago Lesbian and GayFilm Fetival, consisting of over 40shows will take place through April30. Most of the screenings are at Chi¬cago Filmmakers, with three showsat the Biograph Theatre, and twoshows at the Art Institute. For fur¬ther information call Chicago Film¬makers, 6 W. Hubbard St, at329-0854.Berlin Alexanderplatz (R.W. Fassbinder,1980) A 14 Vi hour television mini¬series by the late German master,(see article, page 6.) Based onAlfred Doblins pre-Hitler novel.Parts 1-7 on Saturday, April 9 andparts 8-13 on Sunday, April 10. Thefilm will then be shown in five partsApril 14-21. Film Center, School ofthe Art Institute, Columbus Dr atJackson Blvd; 443-3733 for more in¬formation.Tribute to Paul Robeson Five of theblack actor and activist's mostfamous films. On Friday. April 8,Proud Valley (1940) and EmperorJones. On Friday, April 15, Jericho(Dark Sands), Song of Freedom, andTales of Manhattan will be shownFacets. 1517 W. Fullerton $2.50.THEATERLoot A satire of British morality by JoeOrton. Court Theatre’s final product¬ion of the season, directed by Pau¬line Brailsford Wed-Sat 8 pm, Sun at2:30 and 7:30 pm. Tickets $9-11, stu¬dent discounts available. CourtTheatre, 5535 S. Ellis, 753-4472.A Raisin In The Sun The struggle of asouthside Chicago black family toseek better life. Directed by JohnDavenport; through May 22. Wed-Sat at 8 pm, Sun at 3 p.m. Tickets $7and $9 with student discounts avail¬able. Chicago City Theatre, 410 S.Michigan; 663-3618.The Value of Names a new play by Jef¬frey Sweet, will be running throughMay 8; performances are Tue-Fri at8 pm, Sat at 6 and 9 pm, and Sun at3. Tickets $9-$12 with $2 stu¬dent/senior discount. Victory Gar¬dens Mainstage. 2257 N. Lincoln;871-3000.Cloud 9 Run extended to April 23. Tue-Fri at 8 p.m., Sat 6 and 9:30 pm, Sun3 and 7 pm. Tickets $10.50-$14.Steppenwolf Theatre. 2851 N. Halst-ed, 472-4141.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—3SPRING WITH SAOMINI COURSE REGISTRATION - Eclectic Ed of¬fers: Aerobics. African Dance. Armenian cooking. AutoMechanics. Belly Dancing. Bicycle maintenance. CaribbeanCuisine. Choreography. Indian Dance. Clogging. Guitar. Har¬monica. Jamnastics. Latin Dance. Men's Exercise. ModernDance. Popular Dance. Relaxation Workshop. Register nowin Rm 210 until April 13th.Payment by check only must be made at time of registra¬tion. Late registration is possible for these selected courses. In¬quire now.Theatre Discount-20 % Savings -Twyla TharpDance Foundation-May 7th 8pm $ 11.25 - $6. Ticket orderstaken April 15th. The Mikado at the Lyric Opera House May26th 8pm $13.75. Ticket orders taken until April 27th. Pay¬ment by check only must be made when order is taken.6th Annual Spring Dance - May 13th- Ticketsfor this very special event go on sale April 13th. "Time afterTime" features the music of "The Louie Bellson Orchestra".Having spent his formative years with the greats such as Ben¬ny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and the incomparable DukeEllington, Louie Bellson brings the styles of yesterday's musicto life once again.Tickets are $9 -students G $16 -faculty, staff, alumni. Availableat the University Box Office -962-7300.THE DRY RUN “ providing dance instruction G achance to practice will be held on May 6th 7pm-12am IdoNoyes Cloister Club -Free w/UC ID.Student Activities OfficeRm. 210, • Ida Noyes Holl- for info 24-Hour Activities Line 750-2150 Instant SX-70 nutrition: romanceCOMMERCIALISMCONSUMERISMMATERIALISMSURREALISMMASOCHISMNARCISSISMcontinued from page 1 with notaste for austerity, share the profits of afashion industry intent on perpetuating asmuch status anxiety as possible on theirfemale customers.Narcissistic consumerism? Perhaps thesurrealists meant that the desire for goodsis vain, but the arrangement of the goodsis aesthetically pure. This piece of pufferywas written by French artist Ozenfant in1931 about window dressing: “A sane ge¬ometry derived from Purism and Legerdirects the composition: dresses, boots,casseroled, all play their active parts inthe equations for which they provide thesolution.” Geometry derived from Leger?Does he mean Leger as in “natural ob¬jects” or steam valves? Leger, who trum¬peted the age of the machine aesthetic, themass manufacture of goods. During theseyears, the 1920s, clothing wasn’t the onlyephemeral fashion. For the first time,items like toasters and fans were stylizedwith the hopes that their owners woulddiscard them soon for their outdated style,regardless of their functional resilience.The fantasy world of surrealists and itsflagrant sexuality and masochism reap¬peared in the 1960s—as in the surrealistperiod, leaders in the fine arts, Andy War¬hol, Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschen¬berg, played a major part. Once a yearBonwit Teller displayed serious Pop Art.Not surprisingly, the public was less pro¬voked by Pop Art windows than by theearlier surrealism—by now the public isaccustomed to funky props and kinkymodels. Cultural symbols, like posters ofMarilyn Monroe, hang in their appro¬priate spot—the store window. Incidently,the Pop Artists share the surrealists’ con¬tradictions. By objectifying popular cultur¬al forms, they ridicule commercialism. Byroping off or framing that which is plenti¬ful and banal for their own economic gain,they create a meta-commercialism of theirown.In the 1960s store windows brought anew liberal chic. Some mannequins wentethnic; others went macabre. A particular¬ly gruesome window, designed by RobertCurie for Henri Bendel in 1976, featured awoman bathed in green light lying supineon the floor beside a vial, presumably ofpoison. Three women in attitudes of con¬versation look on amiably and indifferent¬ly. What are we to make of this? Theatre,certainly. But what are the bystanderssaying? By all appearances they are dis¬cussing the merits of Channel’s newestline—“silly of her to drink the perfume.”Perhaps. But why is it a dead woman lyingbefore expressionless ladies? Might notmen have strange accidents with misreadbottles?Which brings to mind the curious factthat of the hundreds of store windows crit¬ics have deemed outstanding for inclusionin the display books, in not one does morethan one man appear per window. Thescarcity of male mannequins is suggestiveof the markedly different roles men play No offense: only one-half of a gay bar.in display windows. First, models in a storewindow are customarily sex objects andthus several male models would naturallybring to mind homosexuality, which wouldbe offensive. According to display artistRobert Currie, “It’s very hard to put half adozen male mannequins in a window with¬out it looking like a gay bar.” Apparentlysix female mannequins in a window do notarouse similar apprehensions. Secondly,male models are not as important commer¬cially—because presumably men will lookat the goods themselves and are less easi¬ly influenced by the accompanying trap¬pings. Retailers hold that men’s clothestend to be functional or a sign of businessstatus rather than a key to identify.Not so for women. As Simone de Beau¬voir put it, “Since woman is an object, it isquite understandable that her intrinsicvalue is affected by her style of dress andornament.” A woman’s notion of selfderives from what she wears, whereas aman’s worth and place in the society arisesfrom what he does. De Beauvoir’s dicho¬tomy is too solid for 1983, but it still holdstrue that a woman’s clothes are more im¬portant to how she is perceived than are aman’s. Women invest a greater proportionof time and money in this enterprise, andas women are offered a greater variety ofstyles, their image building is a more com¬plex undertaking than is a man’s. Storewindows definitely reflect the relationwomen have to fashion in contemporarysociety. Store windows are ostensibly forwomen, and about women—about howmen perceive and desire women and howwomen perceive themselves and aspire tobe desired. Not surprisingly, most displaywindows are designed by men. Of the four¬teen member staff of the visual merchan¬dising team at Carsons, one member is fe¬male. Of the approximately fifteenwell-known display directors in thecountry, one is a woman.In de Beauvoir’s view fashion perpetu¬ates woman’s treatment as an object. InFellini’s Cassanova (1977) and Truffant’sThe Man who Loved Women (1977) manne¬quins (made by men of course) are the ul¬timate objects of the man’s desire. In theirlifeless and impenetrable state they sym¬bolize a man’s inability to love a woman.Similarly, window fashion perpetuates theillusion of the ideal and the search for itsfulfillment.Men, when they do appear in the win-4—FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL+1dow, are often abstract so that just theclothes are featured, not the face or back¬ground. Often men’s clothes are simplydraped on hangers or folded in the win¬dow. At Carson’s, for instance, the men’sclothing, usually displayed simply, is se¬questered to the less heavily traffickedMonroe street. The men’s department isusually on the first floor of most depart¬ment stores, implying that men are lesswilling to go out of their way, or have lesstime to do so.In The Feminine Mystique, Betty Friedanexplores the sense of fulfillment, or lack ofit, that women experience as consumers. She contends that somewhere along theway corporate America discovered theeconomic advantages of convincing thestay-at-home woman that she could fulfillherself through creative use of a newproduct. Presumably the “balance home¬maker” would be more likely than the ca¬reer professional or the more traditionallow-tech housewife to purchase new appli¬ances.American business likewise promotedthe “fashion-insecure” woman. In The Cul¬ture of Narcissism, Chrisopher Lasch re¬lates that “advertising institutionalizedenvy and its attendant anxieties.” Adver¬tising and fashion prompt dissatisfactionin that they tell us what we want, and ifonly due to the temporality of fashion,what we want is never what we have. Win¬dow display, as advertising, is successful.A survey at Cartier’s in New York estimat¬ed that 25% of their customers entered thestore out of interest in the windows. Thosegoods on display sell better.Friedan concluded in The Feminine Mys¬tique that advertising researchers be¬lieved that their operations “helped them(women) rediscover that homemaking ismore creative than to compete with men.”American business isn’t responsible for the creation of the sexual sale, however, butfor its perpetuation. Similarly, the samemay be said for display. For better or forworse, it appears that display does notsimply attempt to set tastes, or createideas, but to exploit them. At lunch withCarson's visual merchandising manage¬ment, the topic of anorexia nervosa cameup. At one point, I asked if Carson's hadplans to use more robust models. They said“no, a model has to resemble a clotheshanger. . .” When asked if they had plansto promote the older looking model whatwith the demographic shift to an elderlypopulation, they replied that they had noplans for more mature models. Their win¬dows are aimed at the 18-35 year old agegroup.Carson’s has avoided much of the politicsand sex seen in New York displays at Tif¬fany’s, Bloomingdales, or Henri Bendels,which not only reflected, but editorializedon, the times. Gene Moore, leader in win¬dow display for 25 years at Tiffany’s, setup window editorials. During the newspa¬per strike he wrapped toy trains withnewsprint. Once he placed completed IRSforms next to a noose and a pistol. Visualmerchandising in Chicago varies from theNew York variety; like the city itself, it isless celebrity oriented than New York.While there is a heirarchy of operation,and the conceptor is at times separatefrom the craftsperson, or the windowcrew, windows are created by group ef¬fort. The merchandise and initial ideacome from the fashion department, andthe display artists modify the idea, but noone artist has complete responsibility fora window. Unlike some New York storesCarson’s does not display art alone with¬out goods. Chicago retailers evidently be¬lieve that the consumer is not as likely tobe attracted to avant gardism for its ownsake, and be motivated to buy at their store for that reason.It is of note that Carson’s has begun toavoid some of the traditional gender roledivisions found in visual display. A recentdisplay in home furnishings called the“Great Getaway” placed two abstract redmannequins per window, clad only inbeach towels and sun glasses. They pull onropes—but the postures of the mannequinsare interchangeable in relation to theirgender. Due to the subtlety of Carson s dis¬play artists, few viewers would under¬stand the relation between the windows ofthe display. It becomes clearer after cross¬ing the street. All of the individual ropes,when joined, comprise a tug of war gamethat takes up six windows.Departing from the typical aversion forplacing more than one man in a window,Carson’s often places several male manne¬quins in a window. A witty window byFrank Myers several years ago presenteda sheep lying in bed, apparently insom¬niac: he counts men. The mannequins hoverover his bed in various postures. The win¬dow is a play on myth; the narrative iswhimsical.The sheep shares some of the theatrical¬ity of the old ladies sitting in their livingroom in “home furnishings,” “Carson's hasit all.” The elderly lady seated on her bednext to her family photographs is predict¬able. But the artist gives the sterotype atwist—underneath her bed lies a dumbbellfor weight training sessions. Similarly theman at the door of his living room (ap¬parently he is just back from the office)faces a room. We can see embroidery yarnon his desk. Several of the other windowsare equally capricious. Perhaps this typeof display is a step in the right direction.I’ll say it is, for sure, only when the win¬dow shows a man sitting on the bed, orwatching T.V., or a woman coming homefrom work.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—5FASSBINDER'S BERUN ALEXANDERPLA TZBerlin Alexanderplatzby Shawn Magee“As I read it for the second time, it be¬came more and more clear to me, page bypage...(I was) initially astounded, thensomewhat uneasy, then ultimately bowledover...I felt almost forced to shut my eyesand ears, to put it out of my mind, but itbecame more and more clear that an enor¬mous part of myself, my way of dealingwith things, my reactions, even that whichI had always thought of as my own self,was none other than that which was de¬scribed by Doeblin in Berlin Alexander¬platz.”Thus does Rainer Werner Fassbinder ar¬ticulate the extreme importance of AlfredDoeblin’s Expressionistic novel, BerlinAlexanderplatz, to a very impressionableyoung filmmaker. Although Fassbinderwas unable immediately to transformDoeblin’s masterpiece into cinema, manyof his early films — most notably Die Liebeist kaelter als der Tod (Love is Colder ThanDeath) (1969) and Faustrecht der Freiheit(Foi and His Friends) (1974) — stand un¬mistakably in its umbrage. It was not until1980, however, that Fassbinder, backedfinancially by German television, was ableto realize his long-standing desire, theapotheosis of which is the fifteen and ahalf hour magnum opus Berlin Alexander¬platz, which will be screened in a varietyof formats during the next two weeks atthe Film Center of the School of the Art In¬stitute.Doeblin’s Berlin Alexanderplatz, writ¬ten in 1929, is the quintessential “bigcity’’ novel in German literature; no otherGerman writer has come close to catchingthe compulsive vitality of urban life as hasDoeblin in his gritty portrait of Berlin be¬tween the Wars. The plot itself is rathermundane and typical for its time. A formerlaborer, Franz Biberkopf, is released fromprison after serving a short sentence formurdering his mistress in a jealous rage.Upon his release, he vows- to begin a “re¬spectable” life, yet economic and socialpressures make that painfully difficult.Chronically unemployed and often drunk, he drifts from woman to woman and evercloser to crime. Franz becomes involvedwith Reinhold, a petty gangster, and, inthe course of a caper, is purposefullypushed by Reinhold from a fleeing auto, anaction which results in the loss of Franz’arm. Franz rebounds yet again, this timewith the love of a naive country girl,Mieze, who supports Franz through prosti¬tution. This idyll is disrupted by the ree¬mergence of Reinhold, who brutallymurders Mieze and then frames Franz.Convicted, Franz suffers a nervous break¬down and is committed to an asylum. Atthe end of the novel, he is once again re¬leased to begin a “useful” life.It is Doeblin’s writing style, however,which creates the cacophony of a city in motion — as Fassbinder himself put it, it isnot the “what” but the “how.” Doeblin em¬ploys essentially a stream of consciousnesstechnique, where anything may invade acharacter’s thoughts, including statisticaltables, weather forecasts, billboard texts,or nursery rhymes, which may all be rat¬tled off in the course of one of the nu¬merous inner monologues. One monentFranz may be contemplating modern mo¬rality and the next be murmuring the Ger¬man equivalent of “Ring around the rosy,a pocket full of posies...” Further contri¬buting to the feeling of sensory overloadis Doeblin’s use of Berlin dialect and slangthroughout most of the dialogue, and muchof the narration as well. The narrator isomniscient, yet as the action is takingTHEATER: GOODMAN & REMAINSby Rachel ShteirLack of insight and triteness of themedominate two plays which recently openedin the Windy City: Caryl Churchill’s Trapsand A.R. Gurney’s The Dining Room. Bothare prime examples of what seems to havebecome the trademark of contemporarytheater in Chicago: mediocrity.Churchill’s play rises above Gurney’s be¬cause the characters are more defined andbecause it asks a question: Can there be analternative to bourgeois life? In The Din¬ing Room, the actors seemed unable to ap¬proach the material with consistency. Al¬though they tried to give depth to theroles, they had difficulty because Gurney’scharacters are so blurred.In Traps, each character represents acertain type of person. Syl, the earthmother; Jack, the authoritarian and Del,the radical, for example, all have definiteidentities and retain them throughout theplay. When they are onstage, their pre¬sence is felt, and when they are not, theyare discussed and disputed to the extentthat their being remains in the house.Six of these individuals unite to form acommune and try to transcend “normal”relationships. They fail because they ref¬use to part with their individuality; theyrefuse to compromise. Jack despises Delbecause Del threatens to disrupt the entiresocial order of the commune with his belli¬gerent behavior. It is petty argumentssuch as this that both demonstrate theirhumanity, and force them to relinquish theconcept of living together in peace.Churchill appears to be advocating ac¬ceptance of the idea that humans willnever be able to achieve harmony. Rather,they will trudge through life aimlessly,waiting for satisfaction to drop upon theirheads. Churchill accents this by confusingscenes, acts, lives to show the sense of dis¬ placement that each of the charactersfeels. People die and reappear, loversswitch and parent-child relationships areblurred.At the end of the play, the groupachieves temporary harmony in the mun¬dane ritual of communal bathing. This nir¬vana is broken by one character’s reluc¬tance to remove his clothes, againemphasizing that humans are unable toget along peacefully.More mediocre is the play entitled TheDining Room by A.R. Gurney. It depicts theevolution of t ie upper class American fam¬ily by usinp a beautiful mahogany diningroom table as the nucleus of their lives.What Gurney ignores is both that the met¬aphorical jse of the dining room as thecenter of family life has been exhaustedand mo e importantly, that the diningroom is only a part of the house. There areother fspects of family life which are asessent al as eating.The Dining Room is typical of many comi-dramns which are being ground out likeraw oeef to attract an audience, and in¬deed, opening night at the Goodmanshewed a full house. These plays try todeal with “contemporary” issues such assex, love, aging, and death, without reallyconfronting them. It appears that theseissues are being used as laugh-getters,mere tokens of meaningful themes. One ofthe skits, for example, satirizes a youngwoman who wants to collect her life bymoving in with her parents. She tries toexplain to her conservative father firstthat she has left her husband, then thatshe is living with another man, and furtherthat she also has a female lover.Another problem with this play is thatwhile Gurney assumes that the WASP cul¬ture is dying, he also assumes that its pre¬servation is a scintillating mind-expand- Remalns Theatre’s Trapaing experience. In trying to satirize theculture, he is blocked because the jokeshave all been used.In addition, Gurney attempts to placetoo many characters and situations into anhour and a half of drama. The play boasts46 characters portrayed by a mere 6actors. Due to the strain of constantlyswitching roles, the actors lose their vita¬lity in the early part of the first act.On the positive side, The Dining Roomtouches some issues which are emotionallyvalid, such as that presented by the boywho wants to use his aunt as an examplefor his anthropology class. Or the grand¬mother who loses her memory at a Thanks¬giving’s day dinner and has to be takenhome. These rare portrayals of emotionare drowned in a slew of soap-operatictype scenes, which destroys any effectthey might have had. place, he frequently cajoles, threatens, orwarns the characters — and sometimesthey answer back. This chaotic simultan¬eity is then often juxtaposed by a cool, dis¬tanced, and clearly ironic stance. In onesuch sequence, in which Franz bludgeonshis mistress, Ida, to death with a woodenwhisk, the description is of the vector andvelocity of the blows.That which has occurred to the rib¬cage of the above mentioned femaleis connected with the laws of rigidityand elasticity, of impact and resis¬tance. It is completely unfathomablewithout knowledge of these laws.The following equations may be ofassistance. Newton's First Lawholds: An object remains in a state ofinertia, as long as no force gives oc¬casion to alter this condition. (Refersto Ida’s ribs.) Newton’s Second Law.The change in motion is proportionalto the change in causal force and inthe same direction. (The causal forceis Franz, or rather his arm and fist,with contents.)Doeblin and Fassbinder have then includedthe pertinent mathematical equations forthe reader or viewer. This montage tech¬nique — the literary equivalent of jump¬cutting — permeates Alexanderplatz, andmay have been, as Walter Muschg sug¬gests, actually influenced by film and thequick cross-cutting so prevalent in Germanfilms of the ‘Twenties.In 1931 the first film version of BerlinAlexanderplatz was created by Piel Jutzi,a film characterized by Fassbinder as“quite good, on its own, just that they for¬got about Doeblin’s novel. The book andthe film have nothing to do with eachother.” In transferring Alexanderplatz tothe screen, Fassbinder, however, has exhi¬bited an amazing fidelity to the originaltext — deftly adapting a 500-page novel,gleaning the essentials while maintainingthe integrity of the original flavor. Tex-tually he has added nothing (except thecharacter of Frau Bast, Franz’ landlady,and also some segments of the dream se¬quence) but his unique understanding of(Doeblin’s intent has created a film which isthe cinematic mirror-image of the novel. Infact, many of the techniques used by Doeb¬lin are actually better suited to the medi¬um of film, and Fassbinder is the master ofthis transfer. He has changed much into vi¬sual and aural background; commercialslogans appear in newspapers or on bill¬boards and hit songs blare from a radio,rather than existing entirely within acharacter’s mind. With the notable excep¬tion of the scenes in the forest, most ofAlexanderplatz was shot in the BavariaAtelier, a huge studio complex outside ofMunich, and much of the action takes placeindoors, where lighting assumes primaryimportance. In what may be termed a hom¬age to Josef von Sternberg — think of TheScarlet Empress — Fassbinder has createdmost scenes in dim light and included asoft-focus filter (as he does in Lili Marleen,also filmed in 1980) to create a sense ofillusion not at all incongruent with thetenor of Doeblin’s novel. In keeping withthe novel’s sweeping epic style, Fass¬binder has, for the most part, avoidedclose-ups, preferring the three-quarterlength shot which Germans call “amerikan-isch.”Of course, one of the reasons Fassbinderwas so touched by Berlin Alexanderplatzis its element of homoeroticism; he sees inthe novel “the story of two men (Franz andReinhold) whose small lives go down thedrain because they did not have thecourage to realize and admit to them¬selves that they liked — even loved —each other in a special way...” Althoughthis aspect of the novel is indeed impor¬tant, it is not the central focus, and Fass¬binder does well to keep this homoeroti¬cism smouldering at just the right intensitybeneath the surface of the film.With the completion of Berlin Alexan¬derplatz, Fassbinder accomplished a majorgoal in his artistic life: the cinematic inter¬pretation of a personally — and histor¬ically — important novel. Although the actof adaptation is frequently thought of asimpersonal editorship, in which the artistis not encouraged to leave his or her per¬sonal mark, Fassbinder has managed toretain entirely the integrity of Doeblin,and, at the same time, treats the viewer toa film unmistakably his own.6— FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALG.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes examined and Contact Lenses fitted byregistered Optometrists.Speciafists in Quality Eyewear at ReasonablePrices.Lab on premises for fast service - framesreplaced, lenses duplicated and pre¬scriptions filled.A PEASANT LUNCHFrench Onion Soup AuGratin served with Cheddarand Swiss Cheese andCrisp, Fresh Apple Wedges.French Bread from ourmorning oven—and a glassof house wine of yourchoice.*3.9553^ St.& ty-fcUyseA)667-2000 The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION:Tomorrow s Rainbow . . . Opportunitiesin Finance/Managementan informal discussion of careers inbusiness for interested studentsGUESTSWilliam BarnhartFinancial ReporterChicago TribuneMolly KramerVice PresidentHarris Trust and Savings BankSi Richard WynnExecutive Vice President and TreasurerHelene Curtis Industries, Inc.12 noon, Wednesday, April 13, 1983Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn AvenueBring your own lunch (Beverages provided) RockefellerChapelof Holy Communion10 amReligious InstructionFor Children11 amUniversity Religious ServiceBRIAN A. GERRISHUniversity Preacher & Prof, ofHistorical Theologyin the Divinity SchoolFACULTY-STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON CAMPUS STUDENT LIFE(FSACCSL, pronounced “facsul”)ELECTIONS 1983-84In May, students throughout the University will have an opportunity to elect eight of their fellows to theFaculty-Student Advisory Committee on Campus Student Life (FSACCSL). These eight will meet withselected faculty and the Dean of Students in the University to advise the latter on the range of non-academicfunctions that are performed by his office. All students in the College, Divisions and Schools interested inserving on FSACCSL are urged to consult the Dean of Students Office (Administration 219) for nominatingpetitions and further instructions.To qualify for candidacy, one must be a registered degree candidate in good standing who will also beregistered in the University during the 1983-84 academic year. A student must file for candidacy from theacademic constituency in which he or she will be a student in 1983-84.Nominating petitions are available now in Administration 219. A candidate should have his nominatingpetition endorsed by the signatures of at least 30 students in the electoral constituency in which he or shewill be registered in 1983-84.Nominating petitions must be returned to the Office of the Dean of Students no later than 4:00 p.m. onFriday, April 29th.DEADLINE FOR RETURNING NOMINATING PETITIONS: APRIL 29THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 8. 1983—7Parent(joofteratiwOPEN HOUSESunday • April 101:00 to 5:00 p.m.(oombreAeswoe (SrescAw?/Fully professionally staffedDiverse, flexible curriculumOpen year round,7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.Ages 24 months - kindergarten5300 S. Shore DriveChicago, Illinois 606155684-6363 Maroon Elections:Tuesday • April 12 • 7pmINH 303The Chicago Maroon will hold its election for editor-in-chieffor 1983-84 on Tuesday, April 12 at 7 p.m. in the Maroon office,room 303, Ida hoyes Hall. The following staff members are eligible to vote in this election:Edward AchuckZlatko BatistichDavid BrooksSteve DiamondAnna FeldmanLisa FrusztajerJoe HoltzKathy KellyLinda LeeLeah MayesBeth MillerSharon PeshkinYousuf SayeedRachel ShteirJeff TaylorAndy Wrobel John AndrewMark BauerBrian CloseMaeve DwyerPat FineganCaren GauvreauKeith HorvathLorraine KennyMadeleine LevinNadine McGannDavid MillerJack PonomarevSteve ShandorJudith SilversteinNick VarsamDarrell WuDunn Abigail AsherDaniel BreslauKahane CornTom EldenPaul FloodCliff GrammichAra JelalianBruce KingFrank LubyJay McKenziePaul O’DonnellWilliam RauchAbb ScherCassandra SmithiesJohn VispoelKittie Wyne Stephanie BaconSteve BrittWally DabrowskiMike ElliotSue FortunatoMargo HablutzelJim JozefowiczSondra KruegerNick LynnVince MichaelMaddy PaxmanCraig RosenbaumKoyin ShihSusan SubakKen WissokerAll eligible voters are urged to attend. Celebration dinner sponsored by the Maroon to follow the election. MetropolitanCommunity Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 579-1299Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmStudios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridaySat. 10-4. _ you have $160 & a way toIF get to N.Y., you can be inEurope by the day after tomorrowwith AIRHITCH. For details, call(800) 372-1234How to make upfor all that cafeteria foodWouldn 't it be nice if your cafeteria served sandwichesand late-night snacks made from Buddig thin-sliced meats?Celery' wrapped with Buddig ham. Buddig turkey piledhigh on wedges of fresh cheese. Maybe Buddig pastrami, chicken,and pepper beef with chilled lettuce and mayonnaise on rye.At 90 calories per 2h oz. package, you couldn't ask for ahealthier between-meal f<x>d. Or one as reasonably priced, either.Now wouldn't it be nice if your cafeteria served all theseBuddig ideas? Of course it would.But since they don’t, you 11 justhave to do it yourself. SotyouwnlimysanMhnrxat. IOC off IOC offTen cents off any package ofBuddig Lean Smoked Thin-Sliced Meats.Mr. Grocer: Carl Buddig Co. will redeem this coupon as described tor the retail price charged on date ofpurchase, plus 7C handling charge Any sales tax must be paid by the consumer Invoices showing purchaseof sufficient stock to cover coupons must he shown to our representatives on request. Coupon may not hetransferred or assigned by you. Void where taxed, restricted or prohibited by law. Good only in the I’.S.A.Cash value 1 20 of one cent. (tiler limited to one coupon per package on purchase of Carl Buddig SmokedSliced Meats. Any other use constitutes fraud. Coupon expires I tecemher dl. IWd. For payment, mail coupontoCAKI. Bl DIHC&CO.. P.O I kix 11 fib. CLINTON. IOWA 527d4.lOt off 7740Q 115162 1(K offL.. .J8— FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALWHAT'S IN TECHNOPOP, AND WHO'S IN HARDCORE ROCKAfter The Snow, Modern English, (Sire Re¬cords)There are some misguided listenersamong us who can’t utter the unfortunatephrase "technopop” without a derisivesneer. For these garage-rock critics—thosecondemned to eternal, rhythmless damna¬tion—the current craze for bands asvaried as ABC, the Thompson Twins, theTom Tom Club, Yaz, Human League, andHaircut 100 is nothing but a triumph offashion over music and production overmaterial. Unfortunately, these critics ig¬nore not only the redemptive aspects ofthe pop music reverence of these bands (asbrilliantly illustrated by ABC’s Lexicon ofLove), but also the invigorating, slyly min¬dless good times these bands can provideon the dance floor. Whether you cate¬gorize it with the label "computer music,”"white disco,” “international music,” orany other ultimately meaningless genretitle, "technopop” has an indispututablymeaningful effect upon the feet.After the Snow by Modern English is agood, although not inspired, example ofwhat is so loosely termed technopop. Musi¬cally, Modern English has most of theprerequisites: majestically produced key¬boards, unflinching percussion, repetitivemelodies, arrangements engineered forthe dance floor, and, not incidentally, a de¬tached, British-sounding vocalist. Lyricsare all that remain and, indeed, lyrics arethe weakest aspects of this album. Whilebands like ABC and the Tom Tom Club glee¬fully reformulate the cliches of pop musicto arrive at an ingenious synthesis of mod¬ern sensibilities and eternally pop idioms,Modern English persists with lyrics whichrather ineptly grope for some meaning,any meaning, beyond a danceable beat."Life in the Gladhouse” is typical—a com¬pelling melody, but lyrics inappropriatelydissatisfied with the mere romance of thedance floor.Nevertheless, After the Snow has muchto recommend it. “I Melt With You,” thecurrent single, shows Modern English attheir best. The lyrics are mercifully, va¬guely, and pleasantly romantic, while themelody courses along in note-perfect preci¬sion. Additionally, the album offers a cou¬ple of surprises, most notably "Carry MeDown”—a hauntingly beautiful tune com¬plete with an uncharacteristic flute. Songslike these make After the Snow, despiteoccasionally repetitive rhythmic tricks andoccasionally obtuse lyrics, a likeable, ifnot memorably original, album. But, in thewords of the Tom Tom Club, "who needs tothink when your feet just flow?”Quartet, Ultravox, (Chrysalis Records)The no smoking sign is lit, your seat is inthe upright position, the engines hum, andyour plane takes off. Over your plasticheadphones, "Reap the Wild Wind,” thenew Ultravox single, pours forth—a per¬fect union of song and situation. With“Reap the Wild Wind” from the albumQuartet, Ultravox manages to evoke thesensation of flight with a weightless ma¬jesty that transcends even the dance floor.^Likewise a similarly effective “Hymn,”* while not quite as evocative of flight, con¬tains a sonic sheen as appropriate to thedance floor as to a religious spectacle. Attheir best—"Reap the Wild Wind” and"Hymn” being the best of Quartet—theshimmering synthesizers of Ultravoxcreate extraordinarily original, dance-able songs, but songs not completely de¬pendent upon the listener’s willingness todance—no small achievement in a beat-crazy world.The success of "Reap the Wild Wind" and"Hymn” makes the rest of Quartet evenmore markedly disappointing. Listening toQuartet in its entirety leads to the inevita¬ble conclusion that the album’s failure liesnot so much with Ultravox, as with produc¬er George Martin. Sure, he could producethe Beatles, but can he produce techno¬pop? The fatal problem of Quartet is oneof over-production; every synthesizednote is just too perfect. While the over¬whelmingly precise production of "Reapthe Wild Wind” is undoubtedly responsiblefor its effectiveness, the rest of the albumstagnates in an over-produced, emotion¬less sterility. Side Two, which ends upsounding like a rather bizarre and ratherspiritless mutation of Roxy Music, is par¬ticularly unfortunate. “Cut and Run,” theside’s best cut, is like a fuse that never ig¬nites—after innumerable false starts, thelistener is left frustrated and annoyed.Even a song with as faultless a title as "WeCame to Dance” ends up a victim of self-in¬duced, studio-perfected torpor. Quartet isenough tojpake-one believe that techno¬pop reafTyte empty spectacle. But, ratherthan clearing your speakers with thenearest Black Flag album, reach for thenew Ministry single.Work For Love, Ministry, (Arista Records)This 12-inch single offers three ways toenjoy the same song—the short version,the long version, and the dub version. Thedouble repeat on this record, rather thanindicating a creative failure on the part ofMinistry, is, instead, indicative of thestrength of Ministry’s material. Three ver¬sions of the same song, in addition to mak¬ing a bid for commercial radio airplay,present three different opportunities todance. While the dub version, naturallyenough, relies upon Ministry’s talent in thestudio, the long and short versions, moreinterestingly, rely upon meticulously ar¬ranged and executed vocal arrangements.This interplay of voices—male, female,and choral—fires "Work for Love” pastmost of its radio competition. The sweetestbackground vocals this side of Bananara-ma, plus an irresistable pop hook, short,but precise instrumentals, and "Work forLove” is my current top of the pops.— Bruce KingEinsturzende Neubauten, "Thirsty Animat”b/w "Durstiges Tier” (Film Palast 12” sin¬gle)This is a collaboration among LydiaLunch, Rowland Howard (of The BirthdayParty), and an ensemble of German noise musicians. Lydia’s side features a mea¬sured orchestration of industrial sounds(horns, drills, etc.) and a repetitious instru¬mental background, complemented byLydia’s trademark, dredged-up vocals.Parts of this song are dolled-up with dust-in-the-needle effects, ^nd the coda is thesound of wrench being thrown in the mix—an appropriate touch. "Durstiges Tier”has wretching, walrus-blurting noises andsome nice guitar pulses, but isn’t inter¬esting otherwise.Oil Tasters (Thermidor)This is a worthwhile LP by a rock/bar-band trio from Milwaukee. There is defin¬itely a formula at work here: saxophoneblasts, strummed bass, some organsplashed about; loose drums and draggingbackground vocals. One exotic touch istheir “minimalist” sax-and-drum set-upwhich, if nothing else, carries the album’slesser songs in a nifty groove. VocalistRichard Lavalliere is pretty distinctivetoo, sounding sometimes like a whineyGraham Parker but usually better thanthat. I was initially put off by the samey-soundingness of the songs, but after sever¬al listenings they resolved themselvesnicely—now I like them all. The specialhighpoint is their cover version of HotChocolate’s “Emma”.The Coasters, Youngblood (Atlantic De¬luxe)"Atlantic Deluxe” is Warner/Eiektra/At¬lantic’s reissue project for the classic R&Boriginally recorded for Atlantic; since thissummer, they’ve released sets by Profes¬sor Longhair, Albert King, Ray Charles,and The Coasters. I’ve only heard the lastof these, and- I’m both impressed and be¬mused by the presentation. The quality ofthe music on these two records is mostlybeyond criticism—the band’s timing, theimpeccable Leiber and Stroller production,and the classic material (my favorites:"Yakety Yak”, “Riot in Cell Block #9”,“Shopping for Clothes”) have an agelessvitality. But this package is half-assed.There is no discernable order to the tracks;the inclusion of inferior tracks from the late 60's drags down every side; It is onlysixty minutes long—surely it could havebeen longer; and it is over-priced ($2 morethan the industry standard for a double-record set). The liner notes are prettypompous, too. Although this will probablybe one of my favorite records for a longtime, it bothers me that it could have beenbetter. Considering WEA’s failure to pro¬mote this new product, I imagine that theyreally have no commitment to this line ofrecords, which is a shame.The Rain Parade, "What She’s Done to YourMind” b/w "Kaleidoscope” (Llama 7” sin¬gle)The Rain Parade is another group in theemerging post-punk scene that includesbands like Mission of Burma and theDream Syndicate. In large, these bandsplay a melodic, hard-edged guitar rockbased on progressive and psychedelicmodels from the 60’s (The Doors, The Vel¬vet Underground, etc.) while trimming theexcesses associated with those styles.Rain Parade adds some sweetening to thismix by adding some Byrds-styled guitarsand vocal harmonies. "Mind” is a lush popsong, evenly paced and filled out with abeautiful lead guitar, while the flip has apleasant, distorted sound and a full organbackdrop. Very, very nice!Rikk Agnew, All By Myself (Frontier)In the past, Agnew has been associatedwith The Adolescents, one of the LA bandsthat presaged the hardcore movement.This record is one of a tradition of eccentricone-man projects, like those Todd Rund-gren does from time to time; he’s playedevery instrument and dubbed them to¬gether in the studio. The trick in this genreis not to sound synthetic. Here, Agnew hassucceeded—he plays all of his parts withequal facility. Most of the cuts rollick witha loud lead guitar and propulsive drums.He’s trimmed his standard punk sound to aclean speed rock, and fitted the songs withgood lyrics about things that move toofast—Life, War, and Relationships. Inshort, it’s hard not to admire a record thattries this hard. —Paul MollicaSTUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONSOfficers and Assembly SeatsPetitions Available April 8th from the Student Government Office (Ida Noyes 306)or the Student Activities Office (Ida Noyes 210).Petitions are Due April 13, 5 pm, Student Government Office.Elections will be held April 19th & 20th.; ATTENTION: MORRY’S COOKIE CONTEST PARTICIPANTSBring both your recipe and cookie samples to Morry’s "C"-Shop, Thursday April 14, at 5 pm. Two■. .a.-*.-5--.*'; finalists will be chosen at that time and the winner will be announced in the Tuesday. April 19thChicago Maroon./ 'i-" MORRY’S DELI in the "C"-SHOP*1131 E. 57th St.*ln Reynolds ClubTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—9NIKKI GIOUANNI: NIGHT WIND RIDERRevolutioni used to dream militantdreams of taking over America to showthese white folks how it should be donei used to dream radical dreamsof blowing everyone away with my per¬ceptive powersof correct analysisi even used to think i’d be the oneto stop the riot and negotiate the peacethen i awoke and dugthat if i dreamed naturaldreams of being a naturalwoman doing what a womandoes when she’s naturali would have a revolution—The Women and The Men, 1978by Rachel ShteirIf an honest poem about self-realizationexists in this century, it stems straightfrom the soul of a woman who is writer,mother, and feminist, encased in one body.To Nikki Giovanni, writing is a transientstate. She began to write because she be¬lieved she could if she decided to do it. Ifshe feels she is not achieving what she de¬sires, she will exchange her current lifes¬tyle for another. “You’re only as good asyour last book; if you’re not writing,you’re not a writer.”This transient state has produced 12 vol¬umes of poetry, 2 records, and an autobio¬graphy (written at age 25). Nikki is unaba¬shedly proud of her work, and feels that itwill outlast what her contemporaries areproducing.In June, this poet will celebrate her forti¬eth birthday. “Yeah,” she sighs. “I know Ilook my age. Women are always expectedto stay young forever.” A skinny woman,merely five feet tall with wispy hair flyingout from under her mocha-colored mohairskicap, she strode into the lobby of thePark Hyatt clad in wide bell-bottom pantsand a hip-length jean jacket. She settledherself comfortably in a chair, and peeredaround the room for a waiter. “He won’tcome over here for half an hour, youknow,” she confided. “We could sit here alldamn night just 'cause we’re women.”When the waiter arrives, she flirts withhim and orders black coffee. “I’m not muchof an eater,” she confessed after describ¬ing a huge lobster feast she had eaten inher room the night before. “I’ve gottakeep the caiories down.”Although her outward appearance is un¬assuming, a few hours before I talked withher she had stunned an audience of collegestudents into reverent silence by readingselections from her poetry. When she read,she put her soul into every word, creatinga tremendous emotional impact. She ap¬pealed to the crowd by cracking jokes andspouting political opinions as well as anystand-up comedian or politician.She is known for her outrageous state¬ments in front of an audience. With relishshe relates the story of her experience at a women’s college where she shouted thatvirginity was boring. “Hell, I said: youplay the clarinet, you’ve got to practiceevery day. If you dance, you got to prac¬tice every day. Why not sex, I said. Andthey all went ‘ooooooh’ ”.After reading she lectured about blackrights, a theme which appears consistentlyin her poetry. Her attitude towards thewhite culture appears to be double edged.When she spoke, she advocated blacks andwhites trying to help each other. In someof her published work, however, her angeragainst the white culture sometimes flirtswith another philosophy. In her book Poet¬ic Equations: Conversations between Mar-geret Walker and Nikki Giovanni, shestates that in order for the black move¬ment to succeed, blacks must regard indi¬vidual Caucasians as part of the mass. Anywhite who is sympathetic to the blackcause cannot be accepted; whites can beacknowledged only as a group, in opposi¬tion. Black students should attend Blackuniversities, says Nikki, so that they canlearn how to lead their people.She fervently supports Harold Washing¬ton and denounces Epton for his campaignslogan (‘Vote for Epton before it’s toolate’). “To late for what,” she queries, ad¬ding that a candidate such as Epton willboth promote racial hatred and preservethe patronage system in a city that de¬serves a chance to live another way. InNikki’s words: Chicagoans must realizethat they are being watched by a nationwhich eagerly awaits the outcome of themayoral race.Another topic which she frequently dealswith in her poetry is what she labels “thehuman situation.”Don’t look nowI’m fading awayInto the gray of my morningsOr the blues of every night—cotton candy on a rainy day,1980According to Nikki, human beings are soworried that natural resources will run outthat they ignore the decay of their ownlives. The decay manifests a lack of com¬munication, the solution to which is “get¬ting along — it's the only thing we haven’ttried and if in 100 years, it still hasn’tworked, human beings can go back tobeing what they were because they don’tdeserve any better.”When I accuse her of being pervasivelycynical, she protests, and then warms tothe idea. “Poets have a right to hope forhumanity, but a lot of the time humanityisn’t worth the effort.” She speaks withanger of a gang rape which occurred re¬cently. She suggests that people committhese violent acts because they are lonely.Loneliness is the characteristic that Nikkibelieves the 80s will be remembered for.if loneliness were a grapethe wine would be vintage If it were a woodthe furniture would be mahoganyBut since it is life it isCotton Candyon a rainy dayThe sweet soft essenceof possibilityNever quite maturing—cotton candy on a rainy day,1980Her iatest book, Those Who Ride theNight Winds differs in both style and con¬tent from her previous works. It is a trib¬ute to all of the people she knows whotake chances, who ride the night winds.“Hell, any fool can hang around in the day¬time; it takes courage to go out at night.”Stylistically, Those Who Ride The NightWinds is far more prosaic than anythingNikki has written. Tired of the verticalform of poetry, she wanted to experimentwith a new form, so she adopted a patternof fragmented sentences connected by el¬lipses.One poem, “Mirrors,” is particularlycontroversial; it salutes Billie Jean King’swillingness to stand up against publicopinion for her sexual beliefs. While writ¬ing it, Nikki could not decide whether shewas merely acting in the same prying man¬ner as the public or revering a womanwhom she idolizes.Nikki’s early life was not all riding thenight winds. Christened Yolande Gio-vanne, she was born in Cincinnati, theyoungest of three children. Her childhoodwas not what she labels the myth of “thetypical black experience,” which shewryly describes as having a mother whodied in childbirth, a father who drank toomuch, a sister who walked the streets, anda brother who overdosed on heroin.Rather than the poverty and emptinessthat is associated with this myth, she re¬calls that her family always hung to¬gether. Both social workers, her parentswere married for 44 years. They taughtNikki not to judge other people, and to letothers make their own mistakes. Accord¬ing to Mr. and Mrs. Giovanni, what ap¬peared to be a destructive action might bea cry for a help. Nikki follows their philos¬ophy to this day with her son Thomas.“He’s under a lot of pressure because he'smy son,” she said, adding that she be¬lieved it was not her right to mold him intoa carbon copy of herself. In Nikki’s words,“he has to have a chance to screw up hisown life.”Nikki speaks of her mother with much re¬spect and of her father (who died recently)with muted bitterness. “There was a lot ofstrain in our relationship because he didn’ttreat me like a human being. Before hedied, he called me up and told me that heloved me and I was still his daughter and Isaid: dad, you’re 20 years too late.”High school was “boring” because shewas not allowed the freedom which she de¬sired. Precociously bright, Nikki entered Fisk College at 16. Too young to want towork, and too bright to have to, all shewanted to do with her newly acquiredfreedom was “get drunk and screw,” sheconfesses.The desire to break rules became an ob¬session for Nikki, and a desire to breakNikki became an obsession of the dean ofwomen. “I remember coming home onenight after curfew and trying to get upthat spiral staircase and out of the back ofmy mind (you know when you’re drunk yousee these things out of the back of yourmind), I saw the dean standing at the topof the stairs. And I thought: oh shit, there’sgoing to be trouble.”And of course, there was trouble. Nikkiwas expelled from Fisk College becauseshe was not behaving in the manner inwhich a Fisk woman was expected to be¬have. She returned to Cincinnati where herparents, true to their philosophy, acceptedher without question.After three years of living at home andactively participating in the black rightsmovement, Nikki returned to Fisk. “It wasa choice between going back to school andgetting a job,” she said. At Fisk, she beganto write and started her own literary mag¬azine to provide an alternate voice for thestudents.Because Nikki participated actively instudent life, and became a resident mas¬ter, she received a full scholarship to theschool of social work at the University ofPennsylvania. Although she had no inter¬est in social work as a career, she acceptedthe scholarship. At Penn, she continued towrite for student publications. In 1966,she published her first, slim volume of po¬etry entitled Black Feeling-BlackTalk/Black Judgement. The book receivedmuch praise from critics. When Nikki wasoffered a scholarship to Columbia, shewent. Her second book was published soonafter. Entitled Re:creation, Nikki feelsthat the stylistic changes made from herfirst book to her second were enormous.Nikki was then asked to teach english atRutgers University. She decided to take achance, and stayed at Rutgers for threeyears. Since then, she has published manyvolumes of poetry, and plans to write anovel. A PBS movie is shortly being pro¬duced about her work.She remains single. When she wasyoung, she never fantasized about marry¬ing, only about having a child. The idea ofwaking up every morning to a man seemsto be a threat to her lifestyle. “Now, I getup at four o’clock in the morning and write.Why ruin a good friendship.” She contin¬ues, “The only people that I knew thatwere happily married were my grand¬parents.” When I suggest that she mightmarry for love, she laughs, as if to chideme for my naiveness. “Love doesn’t last,that’s why you have affairs.”Is she lonely? “I’d rather be lonely bymyself,” she answers, solemn for a mo¬ment. Then; “Shit, who knows. Ask meagain when I’m 60.”5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 aAKIBA-SCHECHTERJEWISH DAY SCHOOL5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd. • 493-8880ANNOUNCEMENT TO PARENTSOF PROSPECTIVE STUDENTSAkiba Schechter Jewish Day School cordially invitesyou to an Orientation and to meet our Teachers:Kindergarten, Grade 1 and Upper Grades, MON¬DAY, APRIL 11, at 7:30 P.M., 5200 S. Hyde ParkBoulevard - Hoffman Educational Building. Nursery(Ages 2Vi -5), WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, at 7:30 P.M.REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED TORAHIS ALIVE AMD WELLIN ISRAEL(212) 751-607010—FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALRAPID READING and TEST PREP SKILLSA Mini-Class in Rapid Readingand/or Preparing for Entrance Examswith Anxiety Control could be the keyin unlocking you from your desk.Dr. Florence Schale, NorthwesternUniversity’s Reading/Leaming Director for over 20 years, offersinnovative programs based upon the latest psychological principlesof learning.MINI-CLASS IN RAPID READING PREPARING FOR APTITUDE TESTSTwo Saturdays, April 23 & 30, 9 am - Noon (SAT, LSAT, GMAT, GRE, and others)Free: $80.00 Public/$60.00 Univeristy ID Five Saturdays, May 7 - June 4,9 am - NoonFee: $180.00 public/$ 150.00 student IDREGISTRATION: At Hyde Park Co-op Education Desk or “The LearningConnection” Room. Group rate has 25% discount.For info call 288-0336The Federalist Societyfor law and public policy studiespresentsA Symposium on Judicial ActivismThe Law School AuditoriumScheduleFriday, April 6Opening RemarksDean Gerhard Casper, University of ChicagoJudicial ActivismJustice Dallin Oaks, Utah Supreme CourtWithdrawing Jurisdiction from Federal CourtsPanelists: Prof. Charles Rice, Notre DameMr. Paul Bator, Assistant Solictor GeneralProf. Lino Graglia, University of TexasMr. Patrick McGuigan, Free Congress CommitteeSaturday, April 9Legislative and Judicial QuestionsSolicitor General Rex Lee. Solicitor GeneralComment: Prof. William Kristol, Univeristy of PennsylvaniaJudicial Review of Administrative DecisonsPanelists: Judge Antonin Scalia, D.C. Circuit CourtProf. Cass Sunstein, University of ChicagoMr. Loren Smith, Chairman, the Administrative ConferenceLunch 7:30-7:457:45-8:158:15-9:30Methods of Constitutional InterpretationJudge Robert Bork, D.C. Circuit CourtProf. Michael Perry, Ohio StateComment: Prof. Grover Rees, III, University of TexasProf. Mark Tashnet, GeorgetownMethods of Statutory ConstructionProf. Frank Easterbrook, University of ChicagoComment: Prof. Richard Epstein, University of ChicagoProper Scope of Judicial Decision-MakingJudge Richard Posner, Seventh Circuit Court of AppealsComment: Mr. Paul Bator, Assistant Solicitor GeneralClosing RemarksOPEN ADMISSION WITH UNIVERISTY I.D. 9:45-10:3010:45-11:4511:45-1:151:15-2:302:45-3:303:45-4:304:30-5:00EXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES • MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONING .ENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TOPARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241-622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLE ORRY’SDELIin the“C” -SHOPWILL BE OPEN UNTIL10:00 PMSTARTING MONDAY*APRIL 11TAKE YOUR STUDY BREAK AT MORRY’S•Plenty of seating *Great Food «Low, low pricesMorry’s C-Shop Only*Good for week ofApril 11-16HOT DOGSFrom 3 pm to 10 pmAll thetrimmingsonly 39Morry’s C-Shop OnlyGood for week ofApril 11-16From 5 pm to 10 pmBUY 3 SANDWICHESGet 1 MORE FREEGood on purchase ofTurkey, Ham, Salami,& Italian Sandwiches. 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The winner will be announced in the Tuesday, May 10thChicago Maroon.NameAddressPhone MORRY’S DELI in the “C” -SHOPOPEN TIL 10 PM STARTINGMonday, April 111311 E. 57th StMandel Hall • In the Reynolds Club*Morry’s The Better Alternative for Dinner TonightTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 8. 1983—11KIMBARK LIQUORSSale Dates 4-8-83 thru 4-13-83SPIRITS750 ml Courvoiser Cognac - V.S 13.29750 ml Smirnoff Vodka 4.99750 ml Gordon Gin 4.99750 ml E & J Brandy 4.99750 ml J & B Scotch 9.99750 ml Old Forester - 86° 5.59WINE SPECIALS1.5 Itr Almaden Mountine Wines 2.99750 ml Lawrence Winery Johannisberg Riesling 3.59 ea 3 for 10.00750 ml Riunite Wines Italian Import 2.69750 ml Corvo Red or White (Italian Import) 3.59 ea. 3 for 10.00750 ml Cignano Chianti (Italian Import) 4.99CHAMPAGNE SPECIAL750 ml Cooks Champagne 3.59BEER & POP SPECIALS6/12 oz. Cans Pepsi 1.79 warm only12/12 oz. 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IL 60201 7566 N. Clark St.. Chica*o. IL 606)4(above County Seat)864-4441 880-5400v J22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983 ORTONJoe Orton’sLOOTNow - May 1Wednesday - Saturday, 8:00Sunday, 2:30 & 7:30753-4472Visa/MC/AmexDining Discounts with Mallory's Restaurant. 24 1-5600CJC Students just S3 on Wed Thur Sun with “Student Rush”(OUm^THIATRi;University of Chicago 5535 S. Ellis AvenuePut the pastin yourfuture!Live in an historic landmarkThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.— All new kitchens and appliances — Community7 room— Wall to - w all carpeti ng—Air conditioning- Optional indtxjr or outdoorparking — Resident manager— Round-the-ckx:k security— Laundry7 facilities oneach fkxjrStudios, One, Twro and Three Bedroom apartments.One Bedroom from $480 — Twro Bedroom from $660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.Ouse1642 East 56th Street^In Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual I lousing Opp< )ftunity Managed by Mem >plex, IncNewsWard candidates exchange„ .. wContinued from page one attacks as race winds downPreckwinkle has also charged Evans withresponsibility for the demolition of approxi¬mately 6000 housing units in the 4th Wardduring his tenure as alderman, saying thatthe units could have been saved by cityrehab money. Evans disputes this figurealso, and claims that courts have controlover the demolition of housing, and not awards’ alderman.In the latest charge and defense ex¬changed between the candidates, Preckwin¬kle has objected to literature circulated by asuspected Evans worker in the 1st precinctin the northern end of the ward. The piecerefers slightingly to Preckwinkle’s interra¬cial marriage, and also accuses Preckwin¬kle of conspiring to help Hyde Park remain“lily white” in addition to trying to “get in aposition to take the lake front from us(blacks) and turn it lily white.” Preckwin¬kle, in attacking the piece, found the allega¬tions “offensive,” and added “It is unfortu¬nate to find such unsavory tactics beingused by one black candidate against an¬other.” She also rebuked Evans for using a“model” of “racist, malicious attacks,” andcalled on Evans “to publicly repudiate theactions of his precinct captain, whose nameappears prominently on the piece in ques¬tion.”Evans, when shown the piece, stated thathe does not “condone activity unfair to anycandidate,” and vowed to see if the namewhich appears on the questioned piece is in¬deed the name of his precinct captain in thefirst precinct.Before the ward re-districting of 1981,done to reflect population changes in the1980 census, the southern boundary of the4th Ward shifted south from 51st St. to 55thSt. With more area from Hyde Park andsouth Kenwood in the ward, the IVI-IPO hasmade an attempt to wrest control of theward from Evans. The issue of representa¬tion of the ward by IVI-IPO or representa¬tion by Evans and his ties to the RegularDemocratic Organization has been a keyissue in the campaign.Preckwinkle, the IVI-IPO endorsed candi¬date, says that she is “proud” of the IVI-IPOendorsement. In addition to the IVI-IPO en¬dorsement, she has been endorsed by suchlocal independents as former state rep. Rob¬ert Mann, former 5th Ward Alderman LeonDespres, State Rep. Carol Moseley Braun,State Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie, State Sen¬ator Richard Newhouse, 5th Ward Aider-man Lawrence S. Bloom, and 5th Ward Reg¬ular Democratic Committeeman AlanDobry. Preckwinkle, who has been criticalof Evans’ ties to the Regular DemocraticOrganization, believes that she, as an “inde¬pendent,” could be more responsive to theward’s needs.Evans also claims a number of endorse¬ments, including endorsements from theChicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun-Times,the Hyde Park Herald, Lu Palmer, BobLucas of the Kenwood-Oakland CommunityOrganization, Jesse Jackson of OperationPUSH, and Rev. George Clements of HolyAngels Catholic Church. In addition to theseendorsements, Evans points to his experi¬ence serving as a chief hearing officer forthe Secretary of State’s office, and being adeputy commissioner for the municipal de¬partment of Investigation. In his 10 years inthe City Council, Evans has served as chair¬man of the council’s health board, and hetakes responsibility for a wide variety ofbills passing the council including rules con¬cerning the sale of meat products, the saleof dairy products, and measures to improvetreatment of newborn babies and theirmothers. Evans also believes that his expe¬rience as a lawyer gives him an advantageover Preckwinkle.Preckwinkle has served on a wide varietyof community organizations and political or¬ganizations before entering this campaign.Preckwinkle is a teacher, and she hastaught in private, public, and parochialschools in neighborhoods such as Chatham,Englewood, South Shore, and Hyde Park-Kenwood. Among other causes, Preckwin¬kle has worked on the Hyde Park KenwoodCommunity Conference Parks Committee,the Hyde Park-Kenwood Recreation Alli¬ance, the Hyde Park Peace Council, and inhelping the United Farm Workers. Since coming to Chicago in 1965, Preckwinkle hasworked in the political campaigns of PaulSimon’s lieutenant governor’s quest in 1968,the 1968 Hubert Humphrey Presidentialcampaign, and campaigns of local indepen¬dents such as Mann, Despres, Braun, Cur¬rie, Bloom, and Washington.One of Preckwinkle’s chief concerns isjobs for the citizens of the ward. She looks tohousing rehabilitation as a key to the ward’seconomic development. Preckwinkle seeksa moratorium on housing demolition, withthe goal of bringing industry to the ward along-range goal. Preckwinkle also looks toimproving ward services, and sharply criti¬cizes Evans in his delivery of services. Shewould open two separate wards offices todeal with constituents’ needs. She said thatEvans has “had ten years to assemble a pro¬fessional staff” but has still failed to asse¬mble a staff to deliver adequate services.Evans has criticized Preckwinkle for hercriticism of his ties to the Regular Demo¬cratic Organization. He notes that the alder-manic election is non-partisan, and as such,he believes that the elected alderman repre-Ex LibrisContinued from page oneAttempts have been made to expand theselection with soup and cans of soda; howev¬er, the governing board ruled against thesoda. Soup was allowed on a trial basis, butthe right to serve it was revoked when a gal¬lon of it was spilled on the library carpet.The new Ex Libris “look” was receivedwell by the workers, while customers gave itmixed reviews.“It helps promote sanity among workers,said Julie Dykstra, freshmen.Customer Mitchell Stein, junior, said, “Itlooks impersonal, it used to be more com¬fortable. Now it looks intimidating like therest of Regenstein. But, on the other hand,it’s better than Morry’s.”“I like it because it is more organized,”said customer William Sanders, junior.One customer found other characteristicsappealing, “Personally, I’m really into for¬mica. It’s really neat,” he said.Overall, the majority of customers ques¬tioned responded positively, although a fewcomplained about the lines that developwhen it is busy.“It’s better than milk crates and ricketytables,” said Joyce, “I just wish peoplewould start throwing away their own trashso that the whole coffeeshop level could looknicer.”Continued from page fiveangers the black community. At least fora short run, racial tensions will be high.Q: What will it mean in either case for theday-to-day welfare of blacks in Chicago?A: Well, unfortunately it’s not going to meana great deal for the day-to-day welfare,day-to-day experiences of blacks. If youthink in terms of jobs, housing, and thesesorts of things, the reason it won’t mean agreat deal is not because the politiciansmay or may not be capable. It won’t meana great deal because these problems —the problems that affect the central citiesof America, Chicago being one notable ex¬ample, problems of jobs, problems ofhousing, delivery of health care, educa¬tion — ail of these issues are nationalproblems that cannot be solved by munici¬pal solutions. Unemployment will remainhigh in Chicago, regardless of who ismayor, unless there is a comprehensiveprogram of economic reform to generatefull employment.Q: Washington has made jobs an issue in thecampaign. Is there any basis for that?Will his election mean anything in termsof jobs? Can it?A: I don’t mean to give the impression thatan urban politician, a mayor cannot alle¬viate some of the problems of the city. Hemay be able to bring in businesses and sents all the voters of the ward, and not theIVI-IPO or the Regular Democratic Organi¬zation.If re-elected, Evans has pledged to createa “ward-wide assembly” of citizens, witheach block of the ward being represented.This assembly would create different task-forces to deal with problems of the ward.Among the committees created would beone dealing with economic development, ahousing task force, a recreation committee,and a senior citizens’ committee. Evansalso hopes to make more use of economicenterprize zones, and he has vowed to usecreate a few jobs. But for the most part hewon’t be making a major dent in unem¬ployment. He may be able to make surethat there is a better delivery of social ser¬vices. But if there’s a fiscal crisis in thecity, the improvement won’t be all thatgreat.Q: What about school segregation?A: You may be able to make sure that youhave a functioning school board. But theschools will remain segregated. Educa¬tion will remain a problem as long as youhave the current problems of poverty andhousing segregation, and the associationof education with the larger problems ofthe economy. For example, you can talkall day long about trying to instill valuesin kids so that they’ll study hard. But ifthere are no jobs out there when they com¬plete their education, that program willnot be very effective.So there are some things a mayor can do,like issues of police brutality. I think theresearch has shown that when a blackmayor comes into office police brutalityagainst both blacks and whites goes down.You can create an atmosphere in the citywhere people will have the sense thatyou’re working to promote the interests ofthe city and things are calm. A mayor cando that.But ultimately a mayor cannot by himself these for the best use of the ward, withoutdisplacing citizens.Whether Preckwinkle can overcomeEvans’ lead on her in the first round electionremains to be seen. Preckwinkle’s cam¬paign manager, Gloria Morgan, believesthat the issue of ward representation has be¬come more clear-cut with two candidates,and that Preckwinkle’s exposure has beenincreased in the northern end of the ward inrecent weeks. However, Evans notes that heonly needs to increase his 46 percent of thevote to 50 percent, and he expects a victo¬ry.address the broader problems of econom¬ic dislocation and the things that are asso¬ciated with that. That calls for a nationalsolution. And the important thing aboutthe Chicago election in this regard is thatWashington is one politician who’s pro¬gressive in his thinking and if he becomesmayor of the city of Chicago, he couldwork with other progressive politicians onthe national scene in fashioning a newagenda. He’d be in a position to do that.That agenda would ultimately benefitcities like Chicago, calling for a major in¬dustrial policy or an urban policy, thesesorts of things.Q: Do you think there’s any chance thatWashington could turn a victory here intoeven higher office?A: There’s always that possibility. A victoryhere could lead to running for the Senateand there’s been a good deal of talk aboutrunning a black for president and downthe road he could even be a candidate forpresident, although that's probably wellbeyond even his wildest expectations. Itcould be that in my lifetime I’ll never seea black candidate who could be takenseriously for president.Dan Friedrich is a graduate student in po¬litical science at the University.Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983—23TheVisiting Fellow William F. Buckley, Jr.at the piano during his stay here. PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANInterviewWilson on the Chicago mayoral raceSportsMuddy fields hamper IM Socim actionBy Nick Lynnand Andy WrobelAnyone who’s been out near the Midwayduring the last two weeks is quite aware ofdifference in nature between yesterday’ssunny blue skies and the condition of theplaying fields. Soccer season got off to aslimy start last week, and between the mudfarms on the Midway and the absence dur¬ing the first few games of goals and cross¬bars, trying to play a match has not been themost enjoyable experience for many.Referee John Thomas noted during theCompton-Bradbury game that the matchwas one of the few that he had seen beingplayed for field position. The Bradburyteam, composed of some of the finer rem¬nants from last year’s champion Fallers team, found their game quite restricted bythe mud, with accurate ball control a farceas both teams slid around in an effort toclear the ball from one end of the field to theother.Likewise, in women’s competition, theTufts team got bogged down in the mirewhile highly ranked Three’s A Crowd faredwell enough to put in six goals.The poor conditions cannot be held re¬sponsible for all of the errors seen out on thefield. The first half of the Hitchcock A-Hen-derson A game was marked by the absenceof good ball handling, and by the tendency ofboth teams to mob the ball. Hitchcockclaims lack of practice was responsible forthe poor performance, however, with only four or five games scheduled in the regularseason, no one can afford the luxury of oneor two losses. Henderson did manage to pullout ahead of Hitchcock, at first with a goalawarded on a highly disputed call by an offi¬cial, and then with three more goals show¬ing the true nature of the Henderson offense,which may prove to be one of the most ag¬gressive this season.So far, in undergraduate residence com¬petition, Compton, Hitchcock A, HendersonA, Vincent, and Bradbury show fair promisefor the men, and the women of Three’s ACrowd, Lower Wallace, and Compton showgood consistency. This is under the worst ofconditions, so as the field changes, so willthe power structure of the teams.■KMOMRFaster Than A Speeding Bullet4Leap Mountains Of Reading Material In A Single Bound!Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics can t teach you howto fly but we can teach you how to READ MORE, READFASTER, and READ WITH GREATER UNDERSTANDING.We mean that LITERALLYOver ONE MILLION PEOPLE have used Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics and have dramatically TRIPLED THEIRREADING SPEED I They've just as dramatically improved theirCONCENTRATION, COMPREHENSION and RETENTION IWould you like to read Time or Newsweek in less than30 minutes? Read a novel in less than an hour? Read a dailynewspaper in a matter of minutes? 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LHiUJtl0C HJi Crumpton IM ScoreboardSOCIMUndergraduate Residence MenRishop 2 Fishbein 1Upper Rickert (by forfeit.. ThompsonFallers (by forfeit) FilbeyChamberlin 2Hitchcock B (by forfeit)....Henderson A 4Dewey 6Vincet 2Lower Rickert 2 Dodd/Mead 1Compton 3Tufts (by forfeit)Blackstone 2Hitchcock A (by forfeit) Psi UpsilonLower Flint 6Undergraduate Residence WomenBreckinridge (by forfeit).... SnellThree’s A Crowd 6 Tufts 0Dudley 2 Lower Wallace 1Snell 2 Upper Wallace 1Lower Wallace 8 Tufts 0Breckinridge 2 Hale 1Compton 6Independent MenMildred 5 Hit and Run 0Psi Upsilon 12Ark Royal 3Decagon 5 Dinkleberries 4Graduate MenInternational House 3 La Surge 0Blue Star Vorwaerts 5 Oligonucleotides 1Gerties 9 BioHazard oReal-Inter 3Saudi Union Movement 4.... Penguins 0Cent/S. America 10 Mazatlan Sporting Club 06 Stars, 3 Bars, and a Bell 4 LH Surge 2Blue Star Vorwaerts 19 International House 0IsraeliFolkDancingTHE BLUE GARGOYLE5655 UNIVERSITY2nd FloorCOST: $1.00 per eveningINSTRUCTOR: Dalia PaludisMONDAYS, BEGINNING APRIL 11thand every Monday thereafterSponsored by the Hillel FoundationMARCH SPECIALSheboygan Bratwurston a home-bakedFrench Roll,withfresh fruit & aglass ofAugsburger(on tap)*2.9553^St. & fyjayaet)667-200024—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983SportsWomen take conference indoor track titleBy Sue FortunatoThe University of Chicago women’s in¬door track team finished its 1982-1983 seasonundefeated by winning the Midwest AthleticConference Indoor Invitational track meetMar. 4. The Maroons accumulated 118points as they defeated Grinnell College(97.5), Cornell College (73.5), Monmouth(23), Beloit (11) and Knox College (4).The Maroons clearly dominated the run¬ning events winning every one except the 2-mile run. After setting a new school recordof 8.1 seconds in the trials of the 60-meterdash, sophomore Natalie Williams took firstplace in the finals with a time of 8.2 seconds.Williams set another school record of 26.8seconds with her first place finish in the 200-meter dash while freshman Linda Kinneytook third in 27.9 seconds. Kinney also tookfirst in the 400-meter dash in a school recordtime of 60.5 seconds while senior AlisonO’Neill placed fifth.Freshman Bipasa Bose took first in the800-meter run and tied a school record withher first place finish time of 5:19.6 in themile run. Sara Dell’s personal record of2:30.8 gave her a sixth-place finish in theMacAloon to headathletic conferenceJohn MacAloon, assistant professor in theSocial Sciences Collegiate Division, hasbeen elected 1983-84 president of the Mid¬west Collegiate Athletic Conference. MacA¬loon succeeds David Applebaum, a mathe¬matics professor at Carleton. TheUniversity of Chicago has been a member ofthe Midwest Conference since 1976. 800-meter run while senior co-captain DianaKaspic took fourth in the mile run with apersonal record of 5:50.1. Although theMaroons were unable to capture first in the2-mile run, they accumulated 15 points asAnn Reed took second, Trish Wong tookthird in a personal record of 12:57.2, andSusan Bonde took sixth.The 4x400-meter relay team of co-captainBecky Redman, O’Neill, Williams and Kin¬ney broke another school record with itsfirst place finish of 4:12.3. The Grinnellrelay teams was disqualified after its lead-off runner cut in to pass Redman on the in¬side of the track. This allowed the Maroonsto gain 10 points on Grinnell who had beenahead of Chicago throughout much of themeet.Softball teamdrops openerThe University of Chicago softball teamlost its opening game yesterday at IllinoisBenedictine College. Although the Maroonstook a first inning lead by 2-0, eventuallythey succumbed to the powerful IBC squad10-3.The Maroons looked impressive throughthe first three innings as they kept pace withIBC. In the fourth inning, however, with thescore tied at three apiece, Illinois Benedic¬tine surged ahead for good.Highpoints of the game for Chicago in¬cluded the pitcher-catcher combination ofKaren Kitchen and Sue Fortuanto and thehitting of Dana Howd and Helen Gemmill.On the whole, coach Linda Whithead saidshe was very pleased with the teams perfor¬mance, but that some improvement is stillneeded. The Maroons were somewhat weaker inthe hurdles and field events although theyearned some points in the lower placings.Shauna Smith set a school record in the 60-meter hurdles with her third place finishtime of 9.6 seconds while Nancy Flores andJulie Mayer took fifth and sixth respective¬ly. Flores took second in the high jump witha personal record of 4’8” while Smith tookthird with a jump of 4’6”. Kinney and Wil¬liams took fifth and sixth respectively in thelong jump while Kathee Waters and JackiMoline also took fifth and sixth respectivelyin the shot put.Head coach Linda WTiitehead feels opti¬mistic about the upcoming outdoor seasonstating that there is a “very good possibilitythat we could win the outdoor conferenceSports CalendarWomen’s TrackApril 8 — at Chicago Metropolitan Colle¬giate Championships, North Central Col¬legeBaseballApr. 8 — at Aurora CollegeApr. 11 — vs. Chicago State, 1:30 P.M., StaffFieldMen’s TennisApr. 11 — vs. IIT, 3 P.M., Ingleside CourtsSoftballApr. 8 — Beloit, doubleheader, 3 P.M. NorthField championship on May 8 with continuedstrong performances and more depth infield events hurdles and long distances.”The team is looking forward to the anticipat¬ed addition of depth and quality perfor¬mances from athletes who will be joiningthe team for its spring season.NewsSell your voteJack Mosoff of the Book Center at 5211 S.Harper Ave. wants to buy your vote. Hedoesn’t care who you vote for, but wants toexpress his appreciation to the Hyde Park-Kenwood community for supporting him inthe past 18 years. Mosoff is offering to pay25* for each green stub voters receive aftervoting. Another alternative is to enter thestubs in a drawing for a 30 percent discounton all purchases from the store.Lecture on Jewishgenetic diseasesThe University of Hillel Foundation, 5715Woodlawn Ave., will begin its Spring lectureseries Friday, April 8, at 8:30 p.m.The first speaker of the spring quarterwill be Dr. Eugene Pergament, director ofthe division of Medical Genetics at MichaelReese Hospital who will speak on Jewishgenetic diseases.The lecture will be followed by an opendiscussion period and refreshments and isfree and open to the community.BOOZALLEN & HAMILTONis seeking 1983 graduates of The College to workas Research AnalystsBooz-Allen & Hamilton Inc. is a leading international management consulting firm,advising top corporate management on issues of strategy, technology, and other businessconcerns.Research Analysts examine a variety of business problems and provide research supportto our Chicago consulting staff. Analysts typically work in this capacity for two yearsprior to pursuing an MBA.Candidates for the position of Research Analyst should have strong quantitative andanalytical backgrounds in areas such as economics, mathematics, computer science,finance, or industrial engineering. An outstanding record of academic achievement isrequired. Previous exposure to the business environment is helpful.Interested candidates should send resume, undergraduate transcript, and GMAT scores, ifavailable, to. Claudia ShattuckMBA and College RecruitingBOOZ ALLEN & HAMILTON INC.Three First National PlazaChicago, Illinois 60602BOOZ-ALLEN & HAMILTON INC.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983—25Classified AdsHTHE UNIT AND THE BUILDING ARE INTOP-NOTCH CONDITION. This completelyremodeled 2 bedroom condo has a wonderfulkitchen, gleaming floors and university loca¬tion. The condo association is one of the bestThere are excellent reserves and it is a buildingwhere everything has been done well. Call tosee.ROCKY LEDGE. What a find. This unit in along established co-op is in wonderful condi¬tion. 2 bedrooms, plus study, a cabinet kit¬chen. woodbuming fireplace and lots of care.Low assessments, great neighbors, and yes, avictory garden in adjoining park. $24,500.A KITCHEN GREAT FOR COOKING, 3bedrooms and a real study. Add a fireplace, 2baths, a campus location and you have adescription of this University Commons Con¬do. Mid $70's.OPEN HOUSE54th & kimbark53rd & WoodlawnSat. April 9th1-3 p.m.1,2, 3 bedroomsLOOK FOR OUR SIGNSTHE PERFECT STUDIO apartment for thesingle person who desires to buy. The well-designed kitchen has ample cupboards and theadditional plus of a microwave oven. Parquetfloors, Levolor blinds, a generous closet andyour own off-street parking make this a specialbuy at $28,000.HOUSE ON THE LAKE That's right! Ahouse at 54th and the lake - and someone elsemows the grass. Only $159,500 for this lovelyHyde Park home. Watch the sailboats duringspectacular sunrises!JUST LISTED! 4722 Greenwood. 3bedrooms, 2 baths, woodbuming fireplace.Beautifully renovated building. Lovely frontyard. Lot's of light. 1134 AML financing$68,000 Call today!HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.955-1SOO CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publica¬tion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACE6100 S. Dorchester, 2 BR apts for rent, 1 & 2bath, cptd., stove & refrig., all electric, securi¬ty buzzer, 1 yr. lease, 1 mo. sec. dept., no pets,$435-$450. CALL Sharon at 369-8484 for appt. 8.SPECIAL rent rebate offer good till 4/19/83.Furn. room 1 block from campus in 5 rm apt.Available 2 ref required call bet. 8:00or at5:00p.m. 324-7104Hyde Park Studio Apts 245.00 clean quietbuilding newly decorated + carpeted stove +refrig laundry facilities 24 hour manager 5140S. Woodlawn 493-625055th & INGLESIDE1 bedroom condo in lovely security courtyardbuilding. New kitchen, bath. Full carpeting,over beautiful oak floors - take your pick!Great association & amenities. Low, lowassessment! $43,000. Call 241-5198Regents Park one bedroom apt. May 1 26th fl.View of Lake 4- Downtown 492.00 947-0453Sunny pleasant apartment available May 1ston Kimbark between 55th and 56th Share Ownbedroom Reasonable rent Call 947-9679PART-TIMEEMPLOYMENTTELEMARKETINGPROGRAMThe American Bar Association is lookins for peopleto contact its members nationwide by phone todiscuss the public service, education and member¬ship programs of the Association.If you possess good speaking abilities and can makea positive impression over the phone, you mayqualify for one of these positions.The salary will be $4.50 per hour. The hours will be6PM to 9PM, Monday thru Thursday. You must beavailable to work at least three days a week.To apply, contact Cynthia Baniak during the hoursabove at:947-3956AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION1155 E. 60th StreetChicago, IL 60637An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H For Rent: 1 bdrm Univ. Park condo, avail.5/1/83 $460/mth Call 241-6282Sunny 2 br 2 ba Univ. Park Condo, hlth club,swimming pool, sundeck, a/c $650.00 mo. availMay 1st Indoor parking (optional) $50.00 JessWilliams 621-5234/241-6950May 1 Sublet with option. Huge sunny furnished studio. $317 per month. Must be student. Bbus 1C close to Coop Mr. G's Call 363-1497Summer sublet with option to rent for nextyear. 5406 S. Harper. Modernbuilding/AC/Balcony/full kitchen. Avail, ap¬prox June 1 400/mo negot. for one or two peo¬ple. 947-8068.Studio + One Bedroom available May 1 & July1 $230 & 550 238-7941. Grad stud pref.Vacancy for male student in grad coop house.Great location. Low rent. Call 955-2653.E. Hyde Park Condo for rent. 4 BR, 2 Bth,parking aval, immed., yearly lease, UC/CTAbuses. Days 793-8170/nites 493-9225.Studio apts. $245. Hild Realty Group. 955-1200.ROOM In spacious, comfortable 2 BR apart¬ment to share with univ staff member, 2 blocksfrom campus. Ideal for law, grad student or jr.faculty. Gothic bldg with top security, hard¬wood floors, sunny, quiet. $250/month. Call 241-6150/night or 962-7528/day.Beverly Shores, Ind. 3 nice homes. $45,000,$67,500 and $70,000. 45 minunes from U of C.Call Renard at Callahan Realty. 219-926-4298.4 rm 2 3 bedrm. Apt, fireplace and sunny baywindows, $516/month icludes heat. Vic. 56thand University. Avilable now or May 1st withoptions for new lease June 15. Call Chris 241 -6646 day or evening or Ellen 241-5948 after5pm.Furnished 3 bedroom house with garden. FromMay to Sept. 30. $400 a month plus utilities.Small family preferred. No children abovefive. Conditions. Call MI-3866 or 753 2492.5429 So. Blackstone 3 br apt 2 bath cptd stovereg need roommate no pets one mts sec. dep.Call 955 0887 or 324-6914.58th & Harper Condo, newly remod. 3 bdrmswith IV2 baths, study, Irge. livng & dining rms.CalendarFRIDAYChicago Debating Society: American National Par¬liamentary Debate Championships - Semi & FinalRounds open to the public. See April 9 listing.Music Dept.: Chamber Music Series — GuarnerlString Quartet 8 p.m. Mandel Hall. For Ticketsphone 962-7300 or 962-8068.I-House: Resident Council Party — Live Music byRuckus 9 p.m.-l a.m. $4. 21 -F ONLY!DOC. Pink Floyd: The Wall 7, 9, & 11 p.m. Cobb$2.Arabic Circle: Robert Schick, Ph.D. student NELCwill present “An Illustrated Lecture on 3E1-Lejjunand the Byzantine-Arabian Frontier” 3:30 p.m. Pick218; Sherry Hour 4:30 p.m. Kelly 413.Comm, on Human Nutrition & Nutritional Bio.: ha-mish N. Munro, M.B., D.Sc. on “Protein Metabo¬lism In Health and Disease: An Integrated Picture”3:30 p.m. SBRI J-136.Hillel: Adat Shalom Shabbat Dinner, $3 6:30 p.m.;Lecture: Dr. Eugene Pergament on “Jewish GeneticDiseases” 8:30 p.m.U.C. Asian Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30 p.m.Augustana Lutheran Church 56th & Woodlawn.Comm, to Elect Harold Washington: Benefit Party7:30 p.m. Del Prado Hotel 1701 E. 53rd. Eddie John¬son Quintet. S15 info 493-7020/493-5492.Geophysics Dept.: Thomas M. Donahue “Did VenusOnce Have An Ocean” 1:30 p.m. Hinds Aud.Calvert House: Medical Students Meeting and Sup¬per: Dr. Larry Wood and Mary Carroll Sullivan on"Withholding and/or Withdrawing Treatment fromthe Critically Ill: Where Does Medical Care BecomeExcessive?” 5:30 p.m.Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: meeting 7:30p.m. 4923 S. Kimbark Topic: “The Local Church”SATURDAYChicago Debating Society: American National Par¬liamentary Debate — Semi-finals 3:30 p.m. INH.Finals 7 p.m. Mandel. For info call 241-6587 or947-9227.LSF: Shadow of a Doubt 7 & 9:30 p.m. Law School92.DOC: The Woman Next Store 8 p.m. Cobb $2.Calvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation 4:30p.m.Crossroads Spring Festival: Children’s Program 3-6p.m.; International Buffet 4-7 p.m.; Cafe Interna¬tional 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. Admission 91.50, Childrenunder 12 50*.Mid-West Middle East Consortium Spring Meeting: All mod. appls. & new hrdwd. firs. $85,000.Mort assum. at 10*. Ray 890-9390.2BR LR Dr. 2 blks from Quad. $550 (Utils-fPark). Negotiable. 962-7290/324 4985.3 bedroom condominiums for sale 55th streetand Everett. Call 357-7926 evenings 979-6091.Fully furnished house f. rent. 4-5 bdrms Aug. 83thru Aug. 84. Close to campus, Billings. Idealfor visiting prof. Call 947-0706.STUDIO APT available immediately furnishedno sec dep REBATE Call Don 962-7424 or 493-3332.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS" WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.TECHNICS SL D303 Turntable. Direct drive,fully automatic. Mint $100. includes cartridge,box, all papers, 241-6438, leave message.BOOKSUsed Book Sale. 25% off until April 15. One toNine everyday. Aspidistra Bookshop 2630 N.Clark."Teargas” mace aerosal. Send for freecatalogue. Good protection against muggersand assualts. Write to: Smith, P O. Box 17345,Chicago, II. 60617.FOR SALE: Sierra Designs 3 man tent $150,Early Winters Goretex bivy sack $50. MSRstove $40 in good shape. Call Jim 324-1579.Desk, office-style wood. 31''x65"x31" $60 7523421 or 944-6780 x235 lv mess for Lukie.Hoover portable washer $70 eve. 752 5860 ALSOKing size waterbed $120 complete.PLANTS ALIVE 5210 S. Harper has plants at30 50*off. Decorate your home or office now.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 8859.9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Pick 218. Presentation of research re¬ports.Hillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:16 a.m.; Up¬stairs Minyan Sbabath Services 9:15 a.m.SUNDAYOriental Institute Films: Rivers of Time 2 p.m. Mu¬seum Aud. Free.LSF; A Star is Born (1964 version) 8:30 p.m. LawSchool $2.Doc.: Before the Revolution 8 p.m. Cobb.92.Calvert House: Meeting for students in the DivinitySchool 7 p.m.Bergman Gallery: Opening reception for Buren ex¬hibit 5-7 p.m. 6811 S. Ellis. Free.Brent House: Episcopal Eucharist & Supper 5:30p.m.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion 9 a.m.; Religious Instruction for kids 10& 11 a.m.; University Religious Service, Brian F.Gerrish presiding, 11 a.m.T’ai Chi Classes: led by Master Wu 3-6 p.m. CloisterClub INH Info call 752-7460 or 288-7113.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.MONDAYSAO: Last Day for Eclectic Ed Registration & Mor-ton-Murphy Award Nominations, RM 210 INH.DOC: Maedchen in Uniform 7:17 p.m., The BlueLights 9:30 p.m. Cobb 91.50.Calvert House: Meeting and Supper for Students inthe Law School: Mary Carroll Sullivan and FatherJohn Hurley on “Authority in the Church” 6:30p.m.Crossroads: English Classes: Beg. 10 a.m.; Int. 10:46a.m.; Beg. Spanish 7:16 p.m.; Beg. Dutch 7:20 p.m.Germanic Lang, and Lit.: Hans-Joachim Kreutzer,U. of Regensburg, on “Literary Images of Mozart inthe Nineteenth Century” 4 p.m. Classics 21.U.C. Judo Club: Practice 6 p.m. Bartlett. Newcom¬ers welcome.Hillel: Students for Israel Meet at Hutch Commons6:30 p.m.; Israeli Folkdancing 8:30 p.m. Blue Gar¬goyle 5656 S. University 91.Comm, on the Conceptual Foun. of Sci.: DavidSchramm on “The Very Early Universe” 4 p.m.Harper 103.Chem & Geophysics Depta.: Prof. Edward Gold-berg, U.C. San Diego, on “The Charcoal Record InSediments” 4 p.m. Kent 107.Aerobic Dance: 920/8 classes & 936/16 classes 5:16p.m. INH Call Lily Li 763-2249 for info.26—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8, 1983yfi ,o8C*I ,8 Inq/. j/iibn'?— noo" ogeoiiTJ odTClassified AdsPersons with childcare experience to care tor10-month-old in our home, Tues.-Thurs. a.m.and Friday, all day. Call 924-6129, after 12.Computer Programmer - 20 hrs./wk.Knowledge of SPSS requ. FILEBOL helpful.Call Tucker wkdays 3-5 p.m. at 947-6902.RIGHT HANDED SUBJECTS wanted forresearch on preception/brain functioning.$3/hr. 962 8846.Sunny inexpensive bedroom available nearcampus. Call 752-1099 eves and weekends.CRUISE SHIPS JOBS! Great income poten¬tial, all occupations. For information call: 602-837-3401 ext. 843.TENOR (2nd) needed for a barbershopquartet. Contact Marc-Shoreland 1005A.UC WOMEN'S CREW - there's only one - don'tsettle for less. Join us for spring rowing.Undergrad & grad students, alumni, faculty,and staft welcome. Call 938-1093or 955-5233.THE JAPAN AMERICA SOCIETY OFCHICAGO SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDATION of¬fers grants to graduate students (Americans)for research which will promote greaterunderstanding between Japan and the UnitedStates. Proposals should be received by April15. For further information, write or call: TheJapan America Society of Chicago, 36 SouthWabash Avenue, Room 620, Chicago, IL 60603;(312) 263-3049.TUTORING JOBS AVAILABLE. Range $4-$7/hour. U of C Talent Bank Program. Come toOffice of CC&P-2nd floor Reynolds Club-fordetails.SERVICESJUDITH fYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.The Group For The Study Of CommunicationProcesses is offering a 4 session trainingseminar in Active Listening for resear¬chers/interviewers beginning 4/21. Total costis $100. For more information, call 363 8580.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Large or smalljobs. Competitive prices. 324 5943, 667-4285.Cello, bass lessons. Exp. teacher, prof, musi¬cian. 324-2144, leave message.PROFESSIONAL TYPING, Reasonable 684-6882.CATERING. Custom menus for all occasions.Wendy Gerick 538 1324.Typing. Term papers theses, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. All projects welcome. 791-1674.Graduate student's wife can take care of yourchild in her home Full or Part time. Call for in¬formation 285-5251.DELI TRAYS-t-Cheese 4- cracker, fresh fruit,fresh vegetable 4- dip, assorted meats, and an¬tipasto trays. Hyde Park Cafes 667 3000.SCENESSign up for Eclectic Ed Mini course now:Aerobics, Belly Dance, African Dance, BicycleMaintenance & Much More! For schedules call753 3591 or come to Rm 210 Ida Noyes.COOKING CLASSES. Chinese and Internatior.al series. Wendy Gerick 538-1324RIDESDriving to Wichita (via K-City) on Apr. 23Return 27. Sojourners call Mark 962 7431(days)COMPUTATION CENTERFREE CLASSES FORSPRING QUARTERThe Computation Center will once again offer aseries of free seminars and low cost courses tothe University community for spring quarter.These seminars begin April 5 and continuethroughout the quarter. A free schedule ofthese seminars and courses is available fromthe Center at the following locations: UsiteBusiness Office (Wieboldt 310), from 10:30 to2:00, Monday - Friday; Main Business Office(Merriam 164, 1313 E. 60th), from 8:30 to 4:30,Monday - Friday and at the Staff OfficeBuilding (5737 S. University), 8:30 to 5:00,Monday - Friday. Copies of the schedule mayalso be obtained from the Social Science Ad¬visor in Pick 123, the Program Advisor in Usiteand the Terminal Attendant in Usite. With theaddition of the second DECSYSTEM 20 computer and the conversion to the MVS operatingsystem on the IBM machine, considerable newsubject matter has been added to the seminars and new ones are offered. Please pick up yourcopy of the schedule and attend any of theseminars or courses of interest.LOSTAND FOUNDHELP-Lost my DISSERTATION notes in blueback-pack from Reynolds Club Bookstore 4/1/83.PLEASE return NOTES or call 328-3585FEATURE WRITERS1 will be in the Maroon office every Mondayand Friday afternoon this quarter. Please feelfree to drop in, or call, to discuss assignmentsand problems. Margo (753-3263).MASSAGE CLASSSwedish-Esalen Massage and Polarity Balanc¬ing synthesized to create a complete relaxing,and healing massage. Taught by Hart Helzerand Bob Rueter. 5 sessions begin Tues., April12. Advance registration required. Call 324-7530 for information or to register.APARTMENTSAVAILABLEStudios, one & two bdrms. some Lake viewnear 1C, CTA + U of C shuttle, laundryfacilities, parking available heat 4- water in¬cluded. 5% Discounts for Students - HerbertRealty 684-2333 9-4:30 Mon-Fri. Sat. 10-4.HERPES RESEARCHUsing interferon for recurrent genital herpes.For males over 18. Howard Brown MemorialClinic, 2676 N. Halsted, 871-5777. Conductingconfidential sexually transmitted diseasetesting and treatment.NOWEIRDOSOne bedrm. for rent in 4 bedrm. apt. avail, im-med. Laundry Back porch & lawn. Good loc.5740 Kenwood. Wide range of normalcy ac¬cepted. Call 241-7767.PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIOPortraits, Weddings, and Special Events arenow being booked by Hyde Park's newest por¬trait studio. Call and speak with Ron Milewskiat The Better Image.1344 E. 55th St. 493-6701PUB CONCERTLeonard 4- Brown, featuring rag time 4- sw¬ing, return on Thursday, April 14, 10-12Memberships at door 21 and over.WANTEDYou want to sell your hi-quality good-condition10-SPEED MEN'S BIKE I want to buy it. CallJoe at 753-8342 xt: 1224. Leave message.RHAPSODY IN BLUEDeita Sigma Semi-Formal at Ida Noyes HallSaturday, April 9, 9 pm Tickets on sale MonFri at Reynolds Club, Cobb, and dining hallsTWYLA THARPModern Dance Co. Sat May 7 8 pm Discounttkts $11.25, $8.25, $6.00 on sale until April 15S.A.O. Rm 210 Ida Noyes 753-3592THE MIKADODiscount Tickets for Lyric Opera's MikadoMay 20 8 p.m. $13.50 Order form SAO Rm. 210IN H 753-3592 Orders taken until 4/29NEEDSUMMER WORK?Help care for 4 children near campus.5days/week, l-6pm, $110/week. Experiencewith young children required. Phone 955-2211after 10 p.m.UNITED JEWISHAPPEALThe U of Chicago United Jewish Ap¬peal/Federation Campaign '83 is April 10-25.Volunteer, pledge, contribute. Help others.Contact David at ^93-7651.GETTINGMARRIED2 UC grads have supplied bands and cateringservice for many University and Hyde Parkweddings in the last 5 years. Music and cater¬ing available for all budgets. Call David 752-6510.BLACKFRIARSTECHIESThere will be a meeting for all people in¬terested in being on the technical crew for theSpring production of Bye Bye Birdie Mon. 4-11at6:00. Aloha!MAYNARDWISHNERThe U. of C. UJA/Federation Student Cam¬paign '83 will host a sherry hour with specialguest Maynard I. Wishner, CEO and Presidentof Walter E. Heller & Co. International. Mr.Wishner is also a Chicago and national Jewishleader. All are welcome to the event, whichwill be at 5:45p.m. on Wednesday, April 13 inthe Garfield Cox Lounge (Stuart Hall). Formore information, contact David at 493-7651. WASHINGTONWANTS YOUHelp make the world a better place! You don'thave to join the Peace Corps to do it. HaroldWashington needs volunteers to help withtelephoning now and poll watching on April 12.Please get involved. Call 924-6800 and ask forConnie.THEATRE MEETINGConcrete Gothic Theatre is holding an openmeeting for everyone who is interested in ac¬ting in our next production, directing next yearor our organization. The meeting will be onMonday April 11 at 7pm in Reynolds ClubNorth Lounge.COM PUTER IZ E D TEXT...Entry, editing, formatting on U.C. computers.Fast, efficient, precise. Expert, all availableprograms. Reasonable. 288-2168/493-2717.SPRING FESTIVALSaturday, April 9 at Crossroads 5621 S.Blackstone. CHILDREN'S FAIR 3-6pm:Films, Clowns, Indian Dance DemonstrationINTERNATIONAL BUFFET 4 7 pm. CAFEINTERNATIONAL 9-lam: With AllenSchwartz, Kestutis Ivinskis, Brian & PeggyHyland. General Admission $1.50 Children 50cHOTLINEDon't deal with it alone. You'll get a betterview of your options and all the informationand referrals you need to make a better deci¬sion and we'll be there for you. All calls areconfidential.SEMI-CONCIOUSPARTYTie and super-ego optional, party at DU 5714 S.Woodlawn this Saturday.GAY? LESBIAN?The GROUP meets ever Tuesday at 8:00 sharpat 5446 S. Kimbark for good talk and good company. All are welcome. Also, GALA is sponsoring a disco/benefit for the Howard BrownMemorial Clinic on Sat., April 23rd from 9-l:am in the International House East LoungeSpecial guest: North Western UniversityGALA. SOMETHING DIFFERENTThat's what you'lll find at the UC COEDCREW Benefit-Auction on Sunday, April 17.From beautiful electron-microscope photos toart, records, and wine, there's variety to suitall tastes. Good food? Of course! Entertain¬ment spots, too. Join the fun! Watch for moredetails.HOTTIXTO COOL MUSICANDGREAT DANCEONENIGHT ONLY CALL 663-0305Lar Lubovitch Dance Company dances to themusic of Philip Glass and Steve Reich at theGoodman Theatre, Tues. April 12 8pm For in-for call 663-0305 9am to 5pmUJF TIMEThe University of Chicago United Jewish Ap¬peal/Federation student campaign is here! Itwill run from April 10-25. Come to the Solicitortraining and kickoff celebration, forrefreshments and films. Get out of the dormand meet new poople - and help those less advantaged than yourself. Training will be Sun¬day April 10th at Hillel (5715 Woodlawr.). Forinformation, contact David at 493-7651.PUB CONCERTLoenard 4-Brown, featuring rag time 4- swing,return on Thursday, April 14, 10-12. Member¬ships at door 21 4- over.WE NEED YOUImmigration, Hospitals. Homes and centersfor senior citizens. Emergency aid for Jewishcommunities around the world. In Israel, theUS, and elsewhere, the U JA helps people in allthese ways. We are one and we need you tohelp in this spring's UC UJA-JUF campaign.For more info, call Dave at 493-7651.FROG + PEACH SPECIALSMonday: Shrimp CurryTuesday: Chicken LiversWed. Spinach LasagnaThurs: Eggs BenedictFriday: Fried PerchHours: 11:30 to 8 00HOTLINEFor infor, referrals and a listening ear dial 7531777 between 7pm and 7amrom'jffeaY Gj/afe wo.493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEMEANWHILE, BACK ATTHE RANCHHidden Ranch on Vi acre, over 4,000square feet of living space. Did youknow it was there, in HydePark/Kenwood area? Available forAugust. $195,000. Call Ken.FOR THOSE WHOSWIM AT HOMEThere is an in-ground swimmingwith this handsome 16-room ESquire residence. Also a coach hwith apartment. $325,000. Near& Greenwood.mm“PARK-LIKE” CONDOA garage for your car! In UniversityPark, a 5 room condo with a niceview. Pool and health club available.$61,500. Call Judy.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 8. 1983—27Hot FudgeSundaesHotChocolatesCappudnoWine ListFull BarFastServiceDraftBeersEspressoHours:Monday-Wednesday11:30 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.Thursday11:30 AM. to 11:00 PM.Friday & Saturday11:30 A.M. to MidnightSunday5:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M.Coming SoonSUNDAY BRUNCH EDICIOnHarperAppetizersFrench Fried Onions 1 50Guacamole — avocado dip with chips 3.00Nachos - tortilla chips layered with cheese, 6 Nachos 225guacamole and sour cream 12 Nachos 4.00Assorted Pate Plate 2.50 Homemade Soups and Chili* cup bowiBlack Bean Soup (vegetarian) 1.00 1.75Chicken and Vegetable 1.00 1.75Beef and Bean Chili 2.00 3.75EntreesServed with bread, butter, and mixed garden salad.Fettuccine AlfredoNoodles in a fresh parmesan, cream, and butter sauce475Seafood FettuccineFish, shrimp and scallops sauteed in butter withgarlic, scallions and a touch of Pernod, on noodles7.25Fettuccine with Sauteed VegetablesTopped with Alfredo sauce625Spinach LasagnaA meatless casserole with layers of noodles,spinach, cheese, and tomato sauce550Fresh Brook TroutDelicately breaded and sauteed, with french fries6.75Chicken LiversSauteed with onions, mushrooms, and wine,on noodles or rice575 Beef StroganoffThe owner's pride. Sauteed strips of sirloin, onions,and mushrooms in a rich sauce of homemade simmeredveal stock and sour cream, on noodles or rice8.85BratwurstA light, subtly seasoned sausage made weekly by a local Bavariansausage maker, with sauteed onions and apples, and french fries5.50Curry ChickenPieces of boneless chicken simmered in a cream curry saucewith fruit, served on rice or noodles.5.50Liver NormandieSauteed with onions, apples, and brandyChoice of rice, noodles, or french fries575Sauteed Fresh VegetablesSauteed lightly with basil, served on nice5.00Mexican SpecialtiesServed -with refried beans and garnished with shredded lettuce, tomato, guacamole, sour cream and hot sauce.Flautas - two jumbo flour tortillas, rolled and stuffed withchoice of beef or chicken and fried until crisp4.75Empanadas -two soft flour tortilla turnovers, filled with cheese,hot peppers, tomato and choice of beef or chicken.Pan-fried and topped with red or green sauce. Enchiladas — beef or chicken rolled into three soft com tortillas andbaked in your choice of red or green sauce Topped 'with melted cheese5.25Tacos —three soft or hard-cooked com tortillas stuffed with choice ofbeef or chicken and lettuce, tomato and cheese4.75RED SAUCE: a tangy tomato sauce, spiced with hot ancho chiles.GREEN SAUCE: milder than our red sauce, and rich with green Mexican tomatillos and poblano peppersHOT SAUCE: a firey, fresh-tasting table salsa with jalaperios, tomatoes, onions and spicesThe Hamburger MediciApproximately 8 oz. uncooked.Served with french fries and your choiceof black bread or Kaiser roll. Served medium-rare, unless specified otherwise.Medici burger (plain) 395 Swissburger 4 40 Mushroomburger 4 45Diet-Burger (no bread) 370 Cheddarburger 445 BBQ-Mushroomburger 455Onionburger 4 20 Chili Burger 5.15 Onion-Mushroomburger 470Barbequeburger 4.05 Sourcreamburger 4 45Mexi Burger—with guacamole and Stroganoffburger—with sauteed onions and mushrooms,hot sauce 5.15 topped with sour cream 5.15Light Meeds & SandwichesPotato Pancakes with sour cream or apple sauce 3.50Chicken Salad Sandwich with french fries- 3 75Omelette (three eggs) choice of any three ingredients:cheese swiss, cheddar, mozzarellameat ham, baconvegetable: mushrooms, onions, green pepper 4 00Spinach Omelette with hollandaise sauce 4 .50 SaladsJulienne Salad mixed garden salad withham, turkey, egg, and swiss cheese 4.50Avocado 8r Tomato Salad 2.50Mixed Garden Salad 1.25Dressings -cream parmesan (50C extra).Italian, white french.5211 South Harper AvenueMn Harper Court