- Grey City Journal SportsIM Socim rankingsSTREET SCENESbackcover -J I • page 18 -The Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 46 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 15, 1983Local pols consider Washington’s Congressional seatBy Cliff GrammichIn the wake of CongressmenHarold Washington’s successfulmayoral bid, several local Demo¬crats are reportedly testing thewaters to determine who will suc¬ceed Washington as representativefrom Illinois’ First District.Many local politicians are repor¬tedly interested in succeedingWashington. These include CliffordKelly, Marian Humes, MonicaFaith Stewart, A1 Raby, RichardNewhouse, Carol Mosely Braun,Renault Robinson, and JohnStroger.Kelly is currently the 20th WardAlderman. Humes is the current8th Ward Alderman. Stewart is a former state representative whomade an unsuccessful bid for the2nd District Congressional seat in1982, placing third in a four-wayrace behind Rep. Gus Savage andEugene Barnes. Raby served asWashington’s campaign directorand ran for 5th Ward Alderman in1975.Newhouse is the state senatorfrom the 13th District, and also ac¬tively worked for Washington inthe primary and general elections.Braun is the state representativefrom the 25th District, which in¬cludes east Hyde Park. Robinson,founder and executive director ofthe Afro-American Police League,served as Washington’s first mayoral campaign manager and isa member of the Chicago HousingAuthority Board. Stroger, a candi¬date in 1980, is 8th Ward Democrat¬ic committeeman and a CookCounty commissioner.The role Washington will have indetermining his successor is un¬clear. Undoubtedly, a Washingtonendorsement would greatly influ¬ence voters participating in the up¬coming special election. However,many aspirants for the seat werestrong supporters of either Wash¬ington’s previous Congressionalcampaigns or his mayoral cam¬paign, and hence he may not indi¬cate a favorite if a crowded fielddevelops. The First District has long beena launching pad for black politicalpower. The district first elected ablack representative in 1928.Today the district has more blacksthan any other district in the na¬tion. William Dawson representedthe district during a long tenurenearly 30 years ago, and duringthat time many considered him themost powerful black politician inthe nation. Dawson’s ability to de¬liver the vote of the First Districtwas responsible for the election ofDemocratic candidates in severalclose elections.Ralph Metcalfe succeeded Daw¬son. Although Metcalfe was closelytied to the Regular Democratic Or¬ ganization for several years, hebroke with it in 1975, and he sur¬vived a bitter primary fight in 1976to give the district independentleadership.Bennett Stewart succeeded Met¬calfe after his death. Stewart wsmore closely tied to the RegularDemocratic Organization, but hewas unable to withstand a primarychallenge by Washington in 1980Washington led a four-candidateprimary race that year, with CookCounty Commissioner JohnStroger finishing second. Washing¬ton’s popularity in the First Dis¬trict provided him with a strongbase frcrr' which he launched hisContinued on page fivebuildingControversy surrounds demolition of YMCAPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANThe YMCA Building just before scheduled demolition. By Jack PonomarevThe National Wrecking Com¬pany began yesterday to demolishthe Hyde Park YMCA Building at1400 E. 53rd St., which has beenclosed for over two years.As of Wednesday, the agreementbetween the city of Chicago, the3-W Development Company, andMetropolitan YMCA had been fin¬alized and merely awaited the sig¬nature of a city official. The sale ofthe property from MetropolitanYMCA to the 3-W DevelopmentCompany will be finalized once thebuilding is demolished.Though the two-and-a-half yearlegal battle has ended, bitter con¬troversy remains over who actual¬ly caused the building's demoli¬tion. Several individuals involvedNew UG ‘social thought’ major setBy Anna Feldman“Fundamentals: Issues andTexts,’’ a new program of concen¬tration in the College, will begin of¬fering courses next autumn.The program is offered by theNew Collegiate Division, and wasapproved last week at a meeting ofthe College Council. According to adescription of the course, the pro¬gram “is designed to enable espe¬cially interested students to con¬centrate on certain fundamentalquestions of human existence andcertain fundamental books that ar¬ticulate and speak to these ques¬tions.”The programs “seeks to equipstudents for the precise andthoughtful pursuit of basic ques¬tions” through rigorous training inthe interpretation of importanttexts, training in at least oneforeign language, and “the acqui¬sition of the knowledge, ap¬proaches, and skills of convention¬al disciplines — historical,philological, literary, scientific,political, philosophical — pertinentto each student’s special con¬cerns.”Leon Kass, concentration chair¬ man, discussed the program. Itwas inspired, he said, “by studentsrequesting the opportunity to con¬centrate on things that are intro¬duced in the core — fundamentalquestions of intellectual and per¬sonal concern.”Kass, a professor in the Collegeand on the Committee on SocialThought, sees the new program asadvantageous from several points.“On the side of the faculty,” hesaid, “this alternative approach toliberal education has been unavail¬able or relatively neglected.”“Fundamentals” serves as an al¬ternative to programs that empha¬size methods, questions of disci¬pline, or methodology.Kass also said that the programrepresents “a serious attempt torelate works of Eastern and West¬ern tradition.”James Redfield, master of theHumanities Collegiate Division,pointed out that the programs willinvolve not only the active partici¬pation of many faculty members,but also the involvement of SouthAsian faculty. “Great books”courses, he said, are generally con¬sidered “ethnocentric” at this andother universities.Donald Levine, dean of the Col¬lege, also commented on the ad¬ vantages of the new program, andmentioned that it would generatenew courses in the College whichwill be open to both “Fundamen¬tals” majors and non-majors. Withthe new program, he said, the cur¬riculum would be enriched.Levine also pointed out that fac¬ulty members who do not ordinari¬ly teach in the College will be offer¬ing courses to undergraduates inthe new program. The impressivefaculty listing for the concentra¬tion includes: Allan Bloom, profes¬sor of Social Thought and in theCollege; J. David Greenstone,master of the Social Sciences Col¬legiate Division; Kass; WendyO’Flaherty, professor of SocialThought, of South Asian Lan¬guages and Civilizations, in the Di¬vinity School and in the College;Redfield; and Karl J. Weintraub,dean of the Humanities Division.Despite strong support for theprogram among members of theCollege Council and backing fromwell-known faculty members. Le¬vine said that “the pros and cons”of the program “w;ere debated ac¬tively” at last week’s meeting ofthe College Council.Continued on page five with the case have implicated theUniversity of Chicago as the mainreason for the building’s destruc¬tion, while others blame 3-W forneglect and presenting unfeasiblerenovation plans for the building.The complaint against the Met¬ropolitan YMCA was originallyfiled by the city in 1981, said Mi¬chael Murphy of the Southeast Chi¬cago Commission (SECC). “Thenother neighbors filed a com¬plaint,” he said, “then we consoli¬dated.” The SECC representedboth the city and the five local resi¬dents who filed the complaint inthe lawsuit.George Cooley of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conferencesaid, “They got exactly what theywanted. The University of Chicagoand the SECC prevented renova¬tion by their harassment. It’s beenvery clear ” He continued, “They’ve createda debt to the community on thepart of the University of Chicago oftwo to three million dollars ”On Wednesday, Cooley tried un¬successfully to have the court stopdemolition of the building. Thecourt responded that it was out ofits hands. Cooley said that 3-W“wanted to rehabilitate entirelyand they got shut down.”Murphy of the SECC placed re¬sponsibility on the 3-W Develop¬ment Company. Last Spring 3-Wpresented plans for renovating thebuilding Two major proposalswere 1) establishing housing forthe elderly in the upper floors andconverting the ground level to re¬tail stores, and 2) establishing of¬fices in the upper floors and retailstores on the ground floor.Continued on page fourNew alcohol policyprohibits advertisingBy Jeff TaylorThe University’s new policy onalcohol possession and sale atcampus parties, released Wednes¬day by Vice President and GeneralCounsel Arthur Sussman, containsno concrete measures to curb un¬derage drinking, but forbids men¬tion of alcoholic beverages on post¬ers advertising parties.The policy statement states thatall members of the Universitycommunity should “be fullyaware” of the legal drinking age,but requires that “each member ofthe community be responsible forhis or her own conduct and for theconsequences of that conduct.”This requirement is in possiblereference to the accidental deathof a Woodward Court resident lastDecember at a private party atwhich alcohol was served The stu¬dent, Lisa Good, fell out of afourth-floor window of WoodwardCourt, apparently while sitting inthe window. The issue of alcohol atparties has received considerableattention since the accident. The new policy also requiresthat non-alcoholic beverages beavailable at all functions where al¬cohol is served. It additionally re¬quires that food be served at allsuch events.Sussman said the provisionagainst advertising availability ofalcohol at events was a manifesta¬tion of “policy already in place.”Sussman said fraternity partiesare “not on campus” and there¬fore to assume they are allowed toadvertise availability of alcohol“is a reasonable way to interpretthe provision.”The policy also states that aca¬demic functions wishing to servealcoholic beverages “at which stu¬dents are likely to be in atten¬dance" must register at least oneweek in advance with their aca¬demic Dean, and designate a per¬son to be responsible for theevent.Student organizations mustapply for authorization to holdevents at which alcohol is servedthrough the Director of StudentActivities."I think that muchof the discussion ofthe defense of insanityis the discussion ofa myth rather than ofa reality."iSo writes Norval Morris inMADNESS AND THE CRIMINALLAW. He continues: "It is nominor debating point that in factwe lack a defense of insanity asan operating tool of the criminallaw other than in relation to avery few particularly heinous andheavily punished offenses. Thereis not an operating defense ofinsanity in relation to burglary ortheft, or the broad sweep of indexcrimes generally; the plea ofinsanity is rarely to be heard inthe city courts of first instancewhich handle the grist of the millof the criminal law—though agreat deal of pathology is to beseen in the parade of the accusedand convicted persons beforethese courts....Operationally thedefense of insanity is a tribute, itseems to me, to our hypocrisyrather than to our morality."Morris marshals his prodigiousknowledge of criminology andthe courts to explain why headvocates the abolition of boththe special plea of unfitness fortrial and the special defense ofinsanity. To emphasize the complex and emotionally chargednature of the topic, he illustratesthe relationship between moraland criminal guilt and the prob¬lem of involuntary conduct in tworemarkable fictional chapters—"lost" manuscripts from theBurmese experience of Eric Blairwho became George Orwell.Madnessand theCriminal LawNORVAL MORRIS$20.00THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO PRESS ATTENTION BSCD STUDENTSINTERESTED IN UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH:Summer ResearchFellowship StipendsAre AvailableStudents interested in applying for a stipend should contact ProfessorGerson Rosenthal, Gates-Blake 17, no later than April 20, 1983. I enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Show your classa Dutch of Class.6 bottles of Grolsch-the “300-year-old brewing masterpiece from Holland.”6 bottles of what experts are calling the best tasting beer sold today. And 6 great waysto show your class what class is all about.2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983NewsNew procedures set for obtaining Convocation tixBy William RauchParents of degree candidates in the Col¬lege wishing to attend this spring’s convoca¬tion must request assigned-seat ticketsthrough the mail under a ticket distributionplan announced this week by the Convoca¬tion Office.The plan was adopted to ensure that allthose holding tickets for the ceremony areadmitted into Rockefeller Chapel. A letterfrom Herman Sinaiko, dean of students inthe College, and a ticket request form weremailed to parents earlier this week.In the past, degree candidates picked uptheir tickets from Harper 280 during theweek of convocation. Each candidate re¬ceived three tickets, and seating at previousconvocations was on a first-come, first-served basis.Convocation Coordinator Mary Bartholo¬mew said that at last spring’s ceremony notall ticketholders were allowed into theChapel because of overcrowding. She saidthat student ushers allowed only ticketh¬olders to enter. Bartholomew said that al¬though each pew in the Chapel will hold 13persons, once 11 or 12 persons seat them¬selves in a pew it appears full, and that theushers could not require those seated tomake room for unseated ticketholders.Bartholomew said that Jonathan Klein-bard, vice-president of news and communi¬ty affairs, allowed unseated ticketholders tostand in the central aisle once the degreecandidates, faculty, and administrators hadmarched into the Chapel. Bartholomew saidthat 1223 of the 1400 tickets printed wereused.A committee was formed over the sum¬mer to deal with the overcrowding problem.It met through the fall, and Bartholomewsaid that it decided in December to adoptthe present ticket distribution plan. Thecommittee members are Robert Ashen-hurst, the University marshal; Bartholo¬mew; Bernard Brown, dean of Rockefeller Chapel; Jan Druyvesteyn, last year’s con¬vocation coordinator; Kleinbard; KatieNash, associate dean of students in the Col¬lege; Ralph Nicholas, deputy provost;Charles O’Connell, dean of students in theUniversity; Geoffrey Plampin, assistantmarshal; Sinaiko; and Maxine Sullivan,registrar.Under the new ticket distribution plan,parents are to return a request form for one,two, or three tickets to the Convocation of¬fice. Tickets for assigned seats will then besent back to the parents. Bartholomew saidthat the names of ticketholders and theirseat numbers will be entered into a com¬puter and that ushers at the ceremony willhave seating charts.Bartholomew said that the Chapel willseat 1600 persons, including degree candi¬dates. She said that there are 592 candidatesbut that she expects only 440 to attend con¬vocation. The same number of candidatestook part in last spring’s ceremony.“I hope that people will not ask for threetickets if they only need two,” Bartholomewsaid. ‘‘There will not be extra seats, it willBy Kahane CornA year of continuous study for five Univer¬sity professors will be completed funded bythe John Simon Guggenheim MemorialFoundation. Donald F. Lach, Raymond T.Smith, Charles E. Cohen, Edward Wasiolek,and visiting professor Reginald Gibbons areamong the 292 recipients, from the UnitedStates and Canada, of the Guggenheim Fel¬lowship Award for 1983. The awards total$5,540,000, the Foundation announced thisweek.The fellowships were awarded to schol¬ars, scientists, and artists on the basis of ac¬complishment in the past and strong prom¬ise for the future. Each recipient willreceive an average of about $19,000 to cover mean a lot to us if people do not request tick¬ets they do not need.”Bartholomew said that the ticket requestmailings will be sent to the parents orparent whose name appears on student reg¬istration forms. Students are responsiblefor entering these names on the forms.Bartholomew said that degree candidatesplanning to attend convocation should con¬tact their parents to make sure they havereceived the mailing and the tickets.Handicapped degree candidates or candi¬dates inviting handicapped guests shouldcontact the Convocation Office (962-8374) toarrange for special accommodations.Nash said that the ‘‘primary reason” foradopting the new distribution plan ‘‘is to geteveryone into the Chapel who deserves to bein.” She said that another motive for send¬ing tickets to parents is to ‘‘cut back” oncounterfeiting and ‘‘black-market” sales oftickets. Nash said that the old system of dis¬tributing tickets provides an unfair advan¬tage to students who can afford to buy tick¬ets from other students who do not plan touse their entire allotment.the expenses of a year’s study. However, ac¬cording to Smith, professor in anthropology7,who will spend the year in England and theCaribbean finishing his book on Caribbeankinship, class, and race, the actual amountsvary according to one’s project.Cohen, professor of art, will continuestudying Catholic reform and religious artin northern Italy from 1512-1545 while Lach,professor of modem history, will study rela¬tions between Europe and Asia in the 17thcentury. Wasiolek, professor of Slavic lan¬guage and literature, will study Tolstoyafter his religious conversion and Gibbons,visiting professor from Northwestern in En¬glish, will continue work on a book of poetry7and of literary criticism.Five profs named Guggenheim Fellows Anna FeldmanFeldman electedMaroon editorDuring the last hours of Chicago’smayoral election, The Chicago Maroonelected Anna Feldman to the position of1983-84 editor in chief.Feldman, a third-year philosophy majorand managing editor of the paper, will suc¬ceed the current editor in chief Darrell Wu-Dunn at the end of the quarter.Jeff Taylor, present news editor, had en¬tered the race for the position, but withdrewat the beginning of the election meeting, de¬ferring to Feldman’s three years’ Maroonexperience.Feldman joined the Maroon as a reporterin the first quarter of her freshman year.The next quarter she was appointed asso¬ciated editor, and subsequently served asnews editor during her second year.Feldman is the first woman editor of theMaroon in five years.CALVERT HOUSEANDTHE CATHOLIC COMMUNITY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBIDWELCOMETOCARDINAL BERNARDINA.ND INVITE ALL OUR LRIENDS AND ALL IN THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITYTO CELEBRATE MASS WITH HIMAT ROCKEFELLER CHAPELSUNDAY APRIL 17th AT 11:00 AM(ALL CALVERT HOUSE MASSES WILL BE CANCELLED ON APRIL 17th)THE ROCKEFELLER CHOIR WILL BECIN SINGING AT 10:40 AM AN OPEN RECEPTION WILL FOLLOW MASSThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15 1983—3NewsCardinal Bernardin to visit hereYMCAbuildingContinued from page oneMurphy said, “The plans presented werebeautiful but economically and legally un¬feasible. It was like a ‘Santa Claus’ plan.”He added, “It was an impossibility legallyto do what they wanted to do, and therewere no provisions for parking.”Concerning 3-W’s intention to implementits plans, Murphy said, “At that time theywere bouncing ideas around. I don’t thinkthey were ever serious about it.” Murphyreferred to the building at 5507 Lake ParkAve. which is owned by 3-W and remains va¬cant. He said, “They (3-W) have yet tobreak ground in any plan for this build¬ing.”Murphy praised the University for its in¬volvement. “They spent a lot of time to getdevelopers to buy the YMCA Building anddo something with it.”Asked why the building is being destroyedrather than renovated, a source involved inthe lengthy legal battle who wished to re¬main anonymous, said, “I‘m totally con¬vinced that the University of Chicago wasbehind this. They payed legal fees and otherexpenses.” The University is a major con¬tributor of funds to the SECC.Jonathan Kleinbard, vice-president forUniversity News and community affars,said, “3-W’ refused to make a commitmenton it (last Spring’s plan by 3-WT).” He re¬ferred to the building as “the blight.”Asked if any group had attempted to havethe building declared a city landmark, hesaid, “Somebody does this sooner or later.The place is big and a danger.”When informed of Kleinbard’s reason forthe building’s demolition^William Luxion,Jr., chief officer of 3-W, said, “the commu¬nity made sure of that. The University of Chicago, the city and the SECC. They con¬vinced Mr. Kleinbard.” Luxion added that“there are funds available for renovation.We couldn’t get any other parties interest¬ed. Word came from on high in the commu¬nity.” *Michael Shakman, attorney for the SECCon behalf of the plaintiffs, said, “My clientswere neutral over renovating or demol¬ishing the building. They want safety.” Hesaid the building was a scene of crime and“a cancer of this neighborhood.” He men¬tioned a case on 67th and Lake Park, wherea policeman was shot to death in an aban¬doned building.Kenwoodburglars nabbedBy Darrell WuDunnChicago police and U of C security believethey have cracked a ring of area burglars,according to Robert Mason of The SoutheastChicago Commission (SECC).Police arrested three persons Tuesdaywho were breaking in to a home on the 1100block of 49th St. A neighbor who had wit¬nessed the break-in notified U of C securityat about 1:30 p.m. A U of C officer arrived atthe scene and arrested Mark Matthews, 17,of 4730 Ingleside Ave. Officers from the 21stpolice district then arrested W’illy Range,36, of 4733 Ingleside Ave. A third person, ayouth, escaped from the scene but was laterapprehended.Police believe these three persons werepart of a ring of burglars in the Kenwoodarea, because the youth was implicated inother burglaries by another youth arrestedthree weeks ago who confessed to about tenarea burglaries.“We should see a decline in burglaries inthe daytime” in Kenwood, said Mason. Hedescribed the arrests as “a very good job byUniversity police again.” By Cliff GrammichJoseph Cardinal Bernardin, Archbishop ofChicago, will pay an official visit to the Uni¬versity of Chicago and its Catholic commu¬nity on Sunday. During his visit here, Cardi¬nal Bernardin will say mass in RockefellerChapel at 11 a.m., meet with PresidentHanna Gray, and lecture on the Christianmission in the contemporary world at 3 p.m.in Rockefeller Chapel.Bernardin is a native of Columbia, SouthCarolina. After attending public schools andthe University of South Carolina, he becamea candidate for the priesthood. He complet¬ed his studies at St. Mary’s Seminary in Bal¬timore, where he received an BA degree inphilosophy, and at the Catholic University ofAmerica in Washington, DC, where, in addi¬tion to his theological studies, he receivedan MA in education in 1952.After his ordination to the priesthood in1952, Bernardin served 14 years in the dio¬cese in many capacities, including the of¬fices of chancellor, and vicar general.In 1966, Bernardin was named AuxiliaryBishop of Atlanta. In 1968, he was electedGeneral Secretary of the National Confer¬ence of Catholic Bishops and the UnitedStates Catholic Conference. As General Sec¬retary, he served as a coordinator respons¬ible for reorganizing these bodies accordingto the norms recommended by the SecondVatican Council.In 1972, Bernardin was named Archbishopof Cincinnati. He served there for 10 yearsbefore being appointed Archbishop of Chica¬go, the See left vacant by the death of JohnCardinal Cody.Bernardin also served as President of theNational Conference of Catholic Bishopsand the United States Catholic Conference from 1974 to 1977. In perhaps his most widelyrecognized role, he is currently serving aschairman of the NCCB ad hoc Committee onWar and Peace which is preparing a pasto¬ral letter for presentation to the US bishopsat a special meeting in Chicago in May,1983Bernardin’s visit is of great significanceto the Catholic community here and its near¬ly 80 years of organization. Catholics firstorganized on campus in 1902 for the purposeof entertaining Archbishop Spalding ofPeoria, then a visiting speaker at the Uni¬versity. The group stayed together, but fold¬ed in 1922.In 1923, Dr. Jerome Kerwin sought to or¬ganize a Newman Club on campus, but Car¬dinal Mundelein turned him down. Preva¬lent fears at the time dictated that aCatholic student coming to Chicago wouldlose his faith to anti-religious or Communistforces. However, Kerwin had unofficial en¬couragement from Archdiocosean Chancel¬lor Monsignor Sheil, and he and other inter¬ested students formed a Catholic club in1924.After Cardinal Mundelein’s death in 1939,Archbishop Samuel Stritch of Milwaukeecame to Chicago. Another development ofthe time important to Catholics at Chicagowas the presidency of Robert Maynard Hut¬chins and the arrival of Mortimer Adler.Hutchins and Adler stirred an interest oncampus in the philosophy of St. ThomasAquinas, and the Catholic community ben-efitted from the interest. Cardinal Stritchgave the Catholic organization on campusofficial recognition in 1941. The visit by Ber¬nardin is the first official visit by a Chicagoarchbishop to the campus Catholic commu¬nity in the University’s history.PORTABLE TAPE DECKS REQUIREA MORE DURABLE TAPE.Maxell cassettes are built tostandards that arc up to 60%higher than the industry callsf( >r. S<) ye>u can jog with. ^ them, jump with them, javelinwith them aid know theyIItake the beating. Which reallymake.-, them winners..Cheaperby the^dogen!UD-XLII-C90 HSiiBGiHigh Level Dios CasserreTapeIV Ml. .r P-ic. $6. 19 ^ach t$76.68/box of 1211-2 t.ipos f $5.45<'.i1 «, t.„.< t. >i- S4.65.M7 11 i.iji.' or $4.00"-i’2 l if' - ''-I S 3. S0< ■ ■ ■($42. 00/bn of 12)ibjf-ct to rhfincvmaxellCorrying Cose$3.98 with purtli.isr o( one Uo/i-n t.($6.98 when . (»urcli«ts«'d «ilon< ) RIGHT FROM THE START.RIGHT TO THE FINISH.IT’S WORTH ITUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTOREPhoto Department970 E. 58th Street Chicago, IL 60637 962-7558 DR. M.R. MASLOVorroumtsT• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSESASK ABOUT OUR ANNUALSERVICE AGREEMENTLOCATED INTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100MwnbwAmerican Opiometnc AssocaOcnI*m Does the End ofthe Term Mean theEnd of Your HospitalInsurance Protection?Short Term Hospital plan providesfast low cost “interim" coverage ifyou're in between jobs, or recentlygraduated.It offers a choice of 60, 90, 120,or 180 day protection. Comprehen¬sive coverage. Low rates. And thepolicy can be issued on the spot.That quick.Let me tell you the details of thisquick coverage plan.Lord & RogersInsurance Agency4747 West Peterson Avenue Suite 400Chicago, Illinois 60646282-6900THE ARMENIAN STUDENTSASSOCIATION PRESENTS ANALL-UNIVERSITYPARTY$1 UCID$5 OTHERS.501-HOUSERESIDENTSFUNDED BY SGFC FeaturingLive Music ByTHE YERAZ BANDandComplimentaryArmenian FoodSAT • APRIL 169 PM-1 AMINTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 57th St.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983NewsVictim’s familyoffers rewardOn behalf of the family of Fern Jordan,the South East Chicago Commission has an¬nounced a $10,000 reward for informationleading to the arrest and conviction of theperson or persons who committed the homi¬cide at 5440 South Kimbark in the early eve¬ning hours of Apr. 15, 1982.The reward fund is offered and providedby the family of the deceased victim, FernJordan.Persons with information that could leadto the arrest and conviction of the perpetra¬tor or perpetrators of this crime should callthe special 24-hour Police Departmentnumber — 744-8381. People need not identifythemselves or they may request that theirnames be kept confidential.For further information, call the SouthEast Chicago Commission at 324-6926.Hebrew litProfessor David Patterson, president ofThe Center for Postgraduate Hebrew andJewish Studies at Oxford, and author of TheHebrew Novel in Cz.^rist Russia and visitingprofessor at Northwestern University, willspeak on: Modem Hebrew Literature Goeson Aliyah, Friday, Apr. 15, at 8:30 p.m., atthe University of Chicago Hillel Foundation,5715 Woodlawn Avenue. The community isinvited to attend.Israeli carnivalThe University of Chicago Hillel Founda¬tion will be celebrating Yom Ha-Atzmautwith Israel independence day celebrationsbeginning Sunday, Apr. 17 at 5 p.m. Therewill be an Israel Carnival of exhibits, slides,street games, music and Food, singing led by Lori Lippitz and dancing led by DaliaPaludis. An Israeli dinner of felafel, humus,salad, pita, dessert and beverages, followedby the Israeli film - Sallah, all at the cost of$2.50. This affair will be held at Ida NoyesHall, 1212 East 59th Street on the 3rd floor.On Monday, Apr. 18, at noon there will bea celebration on the quadrangles with danc¬ing and singing to music.CabaretTickets are now on sale at the Hyde ParkJewish Community Center, 110 E. HydePark Blvd. for “Cabaret” which is beingpresented at the Reynolds Club, Universityof Chicago Court Studio Theater on Thurs¬day, May 5 and 12 at 8 p.m., Saturday, May 7and 14 at 8:30 p.m., Sunday, May 8 and 15 at3and8p.m.For ticket reservations and informationcall 268-4600.New majorContinued from page oneJonathan Z. Smith, professor of humani¬ties and in the College, said, “Its most basicaccomplishment is going to do what anymajor ought to do now — teach people howto read a book carefully. I think that’s some¬thing that should be part of every programand it’s sad that the College would have tocreate a special program for that purpose.”Smith said the program would “enshrine acertain attitude towards texts.”However, the course description reads:“They are to be read not because they ap¬pear on someone’s list of great books or be¬cause they are the products of great men orgreat cultures, but because they illuminatethe great questions and powerfully presentimportant and competing answers.” Relat¬ing texts to questions and issues and con¬texts to texts, on an individual basis, will bea major concern of the program. Washington’s seatPHOTO BY ARA JELALIANTimothy EvansContinued from page onesuccessful mayoral bid.The vacancy in the seat occurred whenWashington defeated Republican BernardEpton in Tuesday’s general election. Thelatest tallies showed Washington with666,429 votes to Epton’s 621,594. City-wide,Washington combined overwhelming blacksupport with strong white support on thenorth lakefront, Hispanic support, andstronger support than expected on the north¬west and southwest sides in winning theelection. Washington received more non¬black support than any non-incumbentblack candidate in a major Northern citysince Cleveland elected Carl Stokes mavorin 1967.In the 5th Ward, Washington took 24,393votes to Epton’s 2,401. Washington collected 23,694 votes in the 4th Ward to Epton’s 1,977.Indicative of Washington’s overwhelmingblack support are the 17th and 59th precinctsin the South Shore area of the 5th Ward. Inthose two precincts, Washington took all 756votes.Washington won every precinct in the 5thWard, but faced close contests in the 24thand 38th precincts. In the 24th, Washingtontook 209 votes, Epton gained 175, and 3 wentfor Socialist Workers’ Party candidate EdWarren. Washington had 186 votes in the38th precinct, Epton got 171, and Warren gotI. In the 37th precinct, Epton’s former homeprecinct, Washington took 308 votes, Epton129, and Warren 2.4th Ward Alderman Timothy Evans wonre-election Tuesday over challenger ToniPreckwinkle. The latest counts showedII,023 votes for Evans, and 8,502 for Preck¬winkle. Preckwinkle fared better in thesouthern areas of the ward which includeKenwood and Hyde Park, and Evans faredstronger in the northern areas of the ward.Neither candidate, however, held over¬whelming advantages in any particulararea.GSB dean to speakon China reunificationRobert Rosett, dean of the GraduateSchool of Business will be speaking at aseminar on reunification strategies forChina. The seminar, to be held in Chinatown(250 W. 22nd PI.) Sunday, Apr. 17, will bepart of a presentation which will also in¬clude a photo exhibit entitled ‘RecentChina,” a Chinese painting exhibit and aDinner banquet. Rosett, who has lived inTaiwan, said his paper is on “An Outsider'sView of Reunification.” For persons inter¬ested only in the forum, admission is freeand it is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m.Student Ombudsman 1983-84The University is now seeking applicants for the post of Student Ombudsman. The Ombudsman’s term ofoffice will not begin until Autumn 1983. He or she will be expected to work with the 1982-83 StudentOmbudsman through the remainder of the academic year.Applications from individual students, graduate or undergraduate, are welcome, as are nominations fromindividual students or faculty. Among undergraduates, preference will be given to juniors and seniors.Applications should be in letter form and must be submitted to the Office of the Dean of Students in theUniversity by Monday, April 25th. They should indicate the candidate’s academic area and level, number ofyears at the University, relevant experience, and other special qualifications for the position of Ombudsman. Atleast three letters of recommendation from other students or members of the faculty or staff should also besubmitted by the April 25th deadline.Applications will be interviewed by a student-faculty committee; the appointment will be made by thePresident.The Student Ombudsman is a part-time salaried official of the University who is also a registered degreecandidate. The Ombudsman is appointed by the President to serve in addition to the regular organization of theUniversity in cases where there are allegations of specific unfairness or inefficiency. The Ombudsman writes aquarterly report, published by the University, giving a general account of the office’s activities and makingsuch recommendations as may be deemed appropriate.DEADLINE: Monday, April 25The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983—5Letters EditorialsSome thinking on drinkingThe University’s new alcohol policy released in yesterday’s Chronicle waspropriately vague and open ended. “Academic units” that wish to serve alcoholmust register with their academic Dean a week in advance and somebody musttake responsibility for the bash. Non-“academic units” must apply for authori¬zation with the Dean of Student Activities. No mention is made of the Universi¬ty’s opinion of alcohol consumption. The criteria which the deans will use toevaluate applications is completely up in the air. This is a policy statement ofoperative paragraphs without an effective preamble.The two specific proposals are a ban on the mention of alcohol in publicizingan event and a rule requiring food to be served wherever there is alcohol.The second requirement deserves our full support. Serving beer without pret¬zels is tacky, and sherry without potato chips and clam dip is a serious fauxpas.The first requirement is easily circumvented if we can all agree on the means.During the last mayoral campaign Chicago displayed its deftness at using co¬dewords. We propose a set of codewords for alcoholic beverages befitting ourUniversity. Instead of printing “Beer Available” on our posters, we will in thefuture print “Plato Available.” If you want to be more specific you can substi¬tute a German philosopher like Hegel for a German beer like Beck’s. Winesshould generally be named after frenchmen so that a wine and cheese party willbecome a Proust and cheese party.Special allowance should be made for sherry. To eliminate confusion a sherryhour will be known as a Shelley hour, after the 19th century poet.Consideration must also be made for American beers. Due to the abundance ofbeers and the dirth of American philosophers (unless you want to promote ama-tuers like H.L. Mencken) American brands should be known by picking suitablevice-presidents. For example, a bland beer like Old Style should be called aMondale while offensive beers like Schlitz and Iron City should be called Nixonsor Agnews.Quantities of alcohol should be labeled with literary terms as well. Seven kegscan be known as seven volumes and a six pack can be called an anthology.Hard liquors should be labeled after particularly hard graders on campus. Itis in this realm where the Maroon will defer judgment to the consensus of thestudent body.Granger endorsesWalsh, Wong, RadkeTo the editor:In the last several years, Student Govern¬ment has changed from a dilatory collectionof politicians-to-be into a representativevoice for students and a responsive serviceorganization. Successful negotiations withthe University Administration, the opera¬tion of the Ex-Libris canteen, disbursingfunds to student groups, and the opening ofthe library during exam week typify thecurrent quality of SG’s work and its effortsto improve campus student life.Candidates for the positions of President,Vice-President and Finance Chair in the SGelections Tuesday and Wednesday all hopeto continue this recent tradition. Three can¬didates, however, because of their knowl¬edge of the University and SG, their provencommittment to student concerns, and, per¬haps most important, their perspective andmaturity, seem to me especially qualified tobe SG officers and meriting support: JoeWalsh, Timothy Wong, and Jon Radke.Joe Walsh is far and away the best can¬didate for Student Government president.He has held an executive position in SGsince his first year. His several accomplish¬ments include the 7-11 Express bus down¬town, the “landing” and flawless handlingof last week’s national student conference,and, as Vice-President this year, the super¬vision of SG’s seven committees and thesuccessful organization of the ExecutiveCouncil. He is well known and respected inthe Administration for his thoughtful advo¬cacy of the student interest in his capacitiesas Vice-President and as a representative toMrs. Gray’s Student Advisory Committee.Joe has brought perspective from his workoutside SG with the campus drama groupsto the considerations of the Executive Coun¬cil and Assembly; his insight and “cool”have been invaluable in keeping SG level¬headed in the past year. This distance cou¬pled to Joe’s familiarity with the workingsof Student Government and the Administra¬tion enable him to picture a problem’s solu¬tion, persuade the necessary people of thesolution’s advantage, and organize its im¬plementation. He is largely responsible formaking SG a recognized voice for construc¬tive change. In all, he will make an excep¬ tional President and I support him withoutreservation.The Vice-President of Student Govern¬ment is responsible for the coordination ofthe Committees and the running of elec¬tions. The position requires a capacity for“detail work,” a working knowledge of bothSG and Administration structure, and sensi¬tivity to those with whom he will work. TimWong, presently the Ex-Libris GoverningBoard Chair, meets these conditions. This isevident in the outstanding work he has donein SG this year. His report on the absenceand desirability of a late-night coffee shopin Hyde Park and his presentations of thisreport before the Dean of the College, DeanO’Connell, and FSACCSL spurred the open¬ing of ‘late-night Hutch’ and Morry’s doingthe same. His negotiations with the head ofthe Library about the remodeling of the cof-feeshop brought the first positive changes inthe atmosphere and menu of Ex-Librissince its inception. The AAUS conferenceenjoyed its productive exchange of informa¬tion in large part because of Tim’s handlingof many of the innumerable details such aconference involves. Tim has impressedthose students and administrators withwhom he has worked with his judgement,efficiency, and reserve. I cannot think ofanyone more qualified to negotiate for stu¬dent concerns and manage the internal af¬fairs of Student Government.The chairman of the SG Finance Commit¬tee works closely with the President and themany student groups which request funds.Some knowledge of the Finance Committeeand finances in general is of course appro¬priate but such un-qualified knowledge andexperience can be overestimated; thechairman is responsible for only the sim¬plest calculations and the long transition be¬tween election and taking office (April toJuly) ensures that the chairman will under¬stand the mechanics of the committee. It ismore important that the head of this com¬mittee have a demonstrated knowledge ofthe difficulties of staging an event oncampus, a proven committment to improv¬ing student life, and the self-confidence tobe polite and sensitive in questioning (andanswering) those groups whose budgets thecommittee considers. Jon Radke surpassesthe several other candidates for FinanceChair in his greater perspective and experi¬ence in organizing campus programs. Asthe moving spirit of the Academic Affairs Committee the past two years and in his po¬sition on the Executive Council, Jon islargely responsible for the successful OpenUniversity and Round Table programs andthe opening of Harper Library during examweek. His competence, evident in the suc¬cess of these efforts, and his prudent contri¬butions to the considerations of the Execu¬tive Council convince me that Radke canchange the reputation of this committeefrom “out-of-control” and “self-congratula¬tory” to one of fairness, calm, and courtesy.His personable disposition and experienceuniquely qualify him for this important of¬fice. Student Government has matured in re¬cent years to become the most productivechannel students have to bring about posi¬tive changes on this campus. Those studentsrunning for President, Vice-President, andFinance consequently should be examinedwith respect to their past work to improvecampus student life and the maturity andthoughtfulness of their hopes for next year.Joe Walsh, Tim Wong, and Jon Radke in myopinion especially merit your support and Iurge you to vote for them in next week’selection.Alan GrangerSG PresidentFOR FINANCE COMMITTEE CHAIRMANJEFFWOLF r Currentlyv. S.G.a TreasurerEXPERIENCE and INDEPENDENCE• Chairman, Student • Finance CommitteeServices Committee Member• SG Representative • Executive CommitteeMember• Chairman, Co-op CommitteeFINANCE COMMITTEE REFORM ORTONJoe Orton’sLOOTNow - May 1Wednesday - Saturday, 8:00Sunday, 2:30 & 7:30753-4472Visa/MC/AmexDining Discounts with Mallory's Restaurant. 24 I 5600(JC Students just S3 on Wed Thur Sun with "Student Rush' Acourt^AthmtreUniversity of Chicago 5535 S. Ellis Avenue6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983ViewpointsThe Israeli tension between power and moralityBy Stuart WagnerThis Sunday, April 17, marks the 35th year of the indepen¬dence of the State of Israel. Three and a half decades ago,the Jewish community in Palestine achieved its indepen¬dence. The years since have been filled with the pride ofIsrael’s accomplishments, the agony of its wars and thefrustration of the search for peace in the Middle East andwith its Arab neighbors. Israel, by virtue of its geo-strate¬gic position, its Biblical past and its inexorable link with theJewish people, occupies a very special place for manyAmericans, Christians as well as Jews. The attention Israelreceives in the American media is pervasive; the JewishState is often criticized, sometimes justly, but just as oftenit is the victim of a double standard. It is a dilemma indeedto decide what criticism is appropriate. The preponderanceof rhetoric and propaganda in any discussion of Israelmakes it all the more necessary to develop a historical con¬text in which to evaluate Israel today.The State of Israel is the product of two powerful currentsin Jewish history and thought. Since the destruction of theTemple in Jerusalem in the year 70 AD, and the subsequentnear-total devastation of the entire Jewish community inJudaea some 65 years later, the Jewish people have beenwithout a territorial home. Everywhere they have beenguests and strangers: 2nd class citizens in the Muslimworld, and quite outside the organic view of the Christiancommunity that characterized Europe until the modemera. The long record of expulsions, persecutions and po¬groms is all too familiar. In the modern age, the Jews ofEurope were emancipated from their ghettos, granted citi¬zenship and equal rights and became members of the newnation-state. Yet the persecutions continued. The Holocaustof Nazi Germany was the culmination of an Anti-Semitismdeeply rooted in the European experience. It is beyond thescope of this article to suggest an explanation for the phe¬nomenon of anti-Semitism. What is clear is that a sense ofmarginality, powerlessness and abnormality based onunique historical and social circumstances has been thefundamental reality of Jewish consciousness in the modernepoch. In this way, the Zionist movement, which offeredpower, security, responsibility and normalcy in the form ofa Jewish State, responded to something fundamental in themodern Jewish experience.From this source comes the formulation of Zionism as apredominantly political movement. It is concerned with se¬ cure boundaries for the State of Israel; it places great im¬portance on gaining respect in the international arena; it isdedicated to the proposition that Jews will never sufferfrom persecution again. Zionism as a response to Jewishpowerlessness is primarily concerned with Jewish power.At the same time, there is another equally powerful com¬ponent in Zionist thought. From the prophets of the Old Tes¬tament comes a tradition carried and extended by genera¬tions of rabbis and scholars. Judaism over the centuries hasdeveloped a comprehensive code of ethics, values and ritu¬als dedicated to social justice and peace. It was the dreamof the builders of the State of Israel, of the Zionist move¬ment, to create in Palestine a just, Jewish society; a societythat would be in accordance with what is best in the Jewishtradition. Zionism proposed to implement, in the form of apolitical entity, the voice of social protest of the Biblicalprophet, the ethical injunctions of the Medieval rabbi, andthe moral criticism of the modern marginal Jew. The Zion¬ist movement spoke often of “prophetic Hebraism,” “alight unto the nations,” and a “just Jewish society”; bydoing so, it corresponded to an insistance on the ethicalcommunity deeply ingrained in Judaism.In this sense, the essence of Zionism and the State ofIsrael is its moral character. The democratic nature of theIsraeli policy is of prime importance; in this emphasis,stress is placed on moral policy, both domestic and foreign.The moral heritage of Judaism is seen as the foundation ofthe state. It serves as a type of paragon to which Israelmust measure itself. Israel is seen as having a special rolein the world, a role which supercedes the laws of realpolitikand normal actions of states.The ultimate challenge Israel faces is the synthesis ofthese two imperatives. To build a society that adheres tothe dictates of both power and morality is no easy task.Israelis themselves feel this tension; it leads them to a realambivalence in times of war and conquest. After the unex¬pected vanquishing of the PLO in Lebanon in 1982, Israeldid not rejoice. Instead, the result of military victory hasbeen anguish. An Israeli officer speaking about the 6-DayWar sums up the dilemma of the Jew in Israel. “W'e carriedin our hearts the determination not to return to Europe ofthe Holocaust; at the same time, we were imbued with thetraditional Jewish identification with the victim.” Thesense of pride that accompanies self-determination ischecked by the anguish of the abuses of power. On the other hand, the memory of past persecutions, especially of theHolocaust, is an extremely powerful component of theIsraeli psyche. The Israeli is well aware of the dangers ofweakness and vulnerability, he is slow to trust those whohave once vowed to destroy him. In sum, the Israeli feelspride in that the Jew is now able to be a soldier; he feelsdespair in that he must be one.I am arguing that to various degrees the tension betweenpower and morality is present in each Israeli. It manifestsitself in the political realm as well, were it has become anexplicit societal struggle. Israel is increasingly being divid¬ed into those who support the war in Lebanon and favor an¬nexation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and those whofeel that the war was unnecessary and wrong and that theterritories currently occupied by Israel should become theforum for Palestinian self-determination. The two sourcesof Zionism, in many ways closely linked as the pillars of theState of Israel, have at late begun to diverge. The opposi¬tion in Israel has clothed itself in moral terms, the govern¬ment speaks the language of power. The cumulative effectof tension in the region, aggravated by recent events, hasbegun to divide the nation; on the societal level we can wit¬ness the polarization of the political and moral emphases.On the individual level, it is not yet clear how the Israelicharacter will be affected.These are crucial days for the state of Israel. Its isolationin the international community has never been more pro¬nounced, its policies and actions are viewed with distrustand suspicion. Anti-Semitic events in Europe have in¬creased dramatically in the aftermath of the war in Leban¬on. Now is a time when people, Jews and non-Jews, despitetheir criticism of Israeli policy, must consolidate and de¬fend the essential justice of Zionism, the national liberationmovement of the Jewish people. At the same time, we can¬not forget that the moral emphasis of Zionism is underseige. It is not a question of returning Israel to something itonce was. Rather, it is our task, those of us who care aboutthe Jewish state, to bring Israel forward to a future built onthe best values of Judaism. As a popular Israeli song says,“Don’t say the day will come, let us bring the day.”Please join us for Israeli Independence Day, Sunday,April 17, at 5:30 p.m. at Ida Noyes Hall.Stuart Wagner is a second-year student in the CollegeLettersCommuters for WolfTo the editor,The Commuting Students Association re¬cognizes the integrity and enthusiasm ofJeff Wolf the candidate for Student Govern¬ment Finance Committee Chair. For toolong the legitimate needs of valid studentgroups have been ignored by disinterestedstudent government cronies. The time hascome for a change and the Finance Commit¬tee needs a breath of fresh air. The officersand members of the Commuting StudentsAssociation enthusiastically endorse theonly intelligent choice in this race, JeffWolf.John A. NowickiPresidentJames CurtinVice-presidentDavid BartTreasurerRalph BremiganSecretaryBrightTo the editor:There exists the potential for the Universi¬ty of Chicago Student Government to serveas a student advocate, a coordinator of so¬cial and academic affairs, and a promoterof improved student services. No one ques¬tions that this potential has been unfulfilledby this year’s Student Government.Members of this year’s Assembly, electedrepresentatives interested in discussion, in¬formation, and action were stifled by thepassive attitude of the executive officers.They received the unfair accusations fromthe president that they were “unrepresenta¬tive” and “dilatory.”Members of the current Assembly havechosen to respond. Their energy and initia¬tive has created the STAR Party — a slate ofofficers and representatives who are com¬mitted to Striving To Achieve Reform.The STAR candidates are students con¬cerned with changing Student Govern¬ ment’s role as a representative body and astudent voice from one of rhetoric to reali¬ty.For the first time in recent memory, theAssembly will feature full support fromgraduates and undergraduates. The execu¬tive slate itself represents a cross-section ofideas and experience: Steve Levitan, candi¬date for president, first year business schoolstudent, and business school representativeto the Assembly, will bring to this office hisextensive undergraduate government andextracurricular experience from Dart¬mouth and the University of California, SanDiego.Mark Hollmann, second year student inthe College, has served Student Governmentas a freshman and Shoreland representa¬tive. Rick Szesny, the most experienced ofthe candidates for the finance committeechairmanship, has served on this committeefor the past three years. He received theMaroon endorsement last year while run¬ning as an independent for this position. Les¬lie Basel enters the race for treasurer withher experience as bookkeeper for the LowerWallace Soda Service, a concession compa¬rable to a small business. Chris Hill, candi¬date for secretary and one of this yearsfreshman representatives, demonstratedhis energy and concern for his constituencyby creating and compiling a freshman sur¬vey during winter quarter.STAR is proud of its broad, diverse, andenthusiastic coalition.In taking on the role as a forum of studentinterests, the STAR Assembly will react tocampus concerns, initiate necessary re¬forms, and act as our voice — a voice recep¬tive and responsive to all students.In the interest of an active and effectiveStudent Government which will take advan¬tage of the resources and diversity of thiscampus, we urge you to join us in voting forthe STAR slate on April 19 and 20.Kathryn KleimanFirst year student in the CollegeGeoff DunawaySecond year student in the College Shoreland president endorses twoTo the editor:Although being somewhat apprehensiveof involving myself in the needless politicsthat has frequently come to characterizeour Student Government, I feel two candi¬dates in the upcoming election deserve thesupport of the student body. Presidentialcandidate Joe Walsh is currently the Vice-President of SG and has involved himselfwith instituting the much-needed readingperiod, obtaining bus service linking HydePark to downtown Chicago, and improvingSG’s image here on campus. Third-year stu¬dent Timmy Wong is a candidate for Vice President and. too. has shown himself to bea well-qualified individual. As the Chairmanof Ex Libris, Timmy Wong has broughtabout substantial improvements in the qual¬ity of food and environment of this studenthideaway. Before that, I worked withTimmy on the Shoreland Concil where hebrought efficiency and excellent manage¬ment to "Fred” our student-run coffeeshop.Both these candidates, I believe, would con¬tinue to serve in the best interests of all Chi¬cago students and I urge their election to of¬fice.John Kendziorpresident of the ShorelandReader suggests a HBC teacherTo the editor:We are told that the Human Being and Cit¬izen course in the College is being closeddown because “no one can be found to teachit.” Have the authorities considered askingGeorge Anastaplo, who lives in our neigh¬borhood? After all, was it not his 1964 articleon Plato’s Apology and thereafter his chal¬lenging book, Human Being and Citizen,which inspired the choice of the course’stitle?Mr. Anastaplo, who teaches constitutionallaw in the Loyola University School of Law,has long been associated with the Universityof Chicago’s Basic Program of Liberal Edu¬cation for Adults. He is widely known as themost outstanding teacher in the Basic Pro¬gram. He has over one hundred publicationsin political science, literature, classics, andlaw, and his books have received copiouspraise in top scholarly journals. He has beenaccorded highest honors by other universi¬ties, having served as a President’s Distin¬guished Visiting Professor and having deliv¬ered the Will E. Orgain lecture at theUniversity of Texas Law School in sequence with justices of the Supreme Court. HisHuman Being and Citizen and his The Con¬stitutionalist (the definitive interpretationof the First Amendment) shore up modernliberty with foundations transported fromfar-away times and places. In fact, his ex¬pertise in archeology, sculpture, ancientmythology, philosophy, comedy, tragedy,and history qualified him to serve for half adecade as a professional guide for tours ofthe Greek ruins and to write the article onGreece for the Encyclopedia Britannica Hehas also designed and crafted some ratherbeautiful stained-glass windows for Rocke¬feller Chapel, and his most recent book. TheArtist as Thinker, has been described as“establish (ing) a new genre of literary in¬terpretation.” This is to say nothing of hisSupreme Court case (In Re Anastaplo, 366U.S. 82 (1961) ), of Justice Hugo Black’smemorable accolade to Mr Anastaplo in hisopinion in that case, or of the Illinois legisla¬ture’s unanimous resolution in tribute tohim.Robert L. StoneDoctoral student in Political ScienceThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983—7On April 19th - 20th ...• STEVE LEVITAN for S.G. PRESIDENT• MARK HOLLMANN for VICE-PRESIDENT• RICK SZESNY for FINANCE COMM. CHAIR• LESLIE BASEL for TREASURER• CHRIS HILL for SECRETARYFOR S.F.A. COURTINGRID BUNTSCHUH KATHRYN KLEIMANGEOFF DUNAWAY DAN MONTEITHRITA WALTERFOR REPRESENTATIVE SEATSBIOLOGY BRECK./BLCKSTN./GRNWD,TOM McGARRY DEREK BU2ASIKARYN CORSOBUSINESS SCHOOLCLAY COLEMANANDY HOLLBACHWILL LEESTATIS RIZASCAROLYN RODEFFERHERBERT YOONHUMANITIESDAN GILMANANNA LEIDERMEDICINEFRED JACOBSONNICK KLETTIPUBLIC POLICYJEFF SANDERSWOODWARDLAURA KOENIGKATHY URADNIK FRATERNITIESJEFF PAYDENLAW SCHOOLBILL ENGLESVINCE HILLERYOTHER COLLEGEMADELEINE LEViNURBAN LARSONSHORELANDALTHEA FORRESTERDAVID KIRSCHNERKEITH STOLTEBETH ZIMMERMAN BURTON-JUDSONTERESE SZESNYHITCHCOCK-SNELLADAM VODRASKASOCIAL SCIENCEKAREN ALSTONPAUL HARVELLOGGIE KIMLIBRARY SCIENCEJAMES FOSTER REDINGPIERCEJON KINGKENN BLOOMTHE ALL UNIVERSITY SLATE** STRIVING TO ACHIEVE REFORM 1701E.55TH 11 -7 EVERYDAY684-3375 262-1593 Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesIDEAS & METHODSFUNDAMENTALS: ISSUES& TEXTSPOLITICS, ECONOMICS,RHETORIC & LAW (PERL)THE TUTORIAL STUDIESPROGRAM IN THE NEWCOLLEGIATE DIVISIONWELCOME YOU TO ARECEPTIONTuesday • April 19*4 PM • Harper 284There will be an opportunity to meet and talk informallywith faculty members, students, and the student advisor for NCD.Refreshments will be served.THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE BEDROOMS•Unfurnished and furnished•U. of C. Bus Stop•Free Pool Membership•Carpeting and Drapes Included•Secure Building - Emily's Dress Shop•University Subsidy for Students & Staff•Delicatessen •BeautyShop•Barber Shop •T.J.'s Restaurant•Dentist •Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMr. Keller 752*38008—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983GREY CITY JOURNAL15 April 1983 • 15th YearWilliam Brown, Ingrid Blekys, and Joe Van Slyke in Joe Orton's Lootby Vince MichaelFree. That’s how I felt as I left Court Theatre lastThursday night. Some plays make you engage in longintellectual conversations. Some make you giggle andgo for donuts and coffee. Others make you quiet, sad, ormeditative. After seeing Loot, a mid-Sixties British so¬cial farce by Joe Orton, I felt free — not of the play butof the artificial constructs and repressive customs withwhich we bind ourselves. Now things were cool. Any¬thing goes and there is absolutely nothing fuckingwrong with that. All the paper tigers of church, state,family, marriage, and even death had been scattered ina gust of satirical wit and narrative entropy. I felt likeHyde Park’s poet Joffrey Stewart, expounding uponthe joy of “sweet a-nar-chy’’.It wasn’t just the Beatles music before the curtain (“ADay In The Life’’ gains new nuances here), nor the aptand clever set design and costumes of Linda Buchananand Nancy Missimi, that caused Court's production to beon target from the start. Credit must (and will) be givento the Director Pauline Brailsford and the cast, but it isthe genius of Orton’s conception that makes this show.Where to begin his comedy? How about in the Catholichome of Mr. McLeavy on the day of his wife's funeral?We find Mr. McLeavy in his living room being comforted,cajoled, and eventually courted by Fay, his wife's nurse.That Mrs. McLeavy is currently lying dead in an opencoffin in the selfsame room dampens neither Fay’s ad¬vances nor her scrupulously pious Catholicism.The transgression of one sacred barrier leads quicklyto another, and even Court’s overstuffed mink-lined pa¬trons are inexorably drawn into this hilarious decon¬struction of societal edifice and pretention. The son, Hal,and his undertaker friend Dennis, are classic younglads, whoring and thieving life away. William Brown isstrong as Dennis, mixing the right amount of swagger,fear, and charisma into his character who “scatters hisseed along the pavement without regard to age orsex’’, according to Inspector Truscott.The amazing thing about this dramatic anarchy is thatOrton is terribly entertaining the whole way through,without entirely dismissing his stage world as an unrealpremise. The characters are almost too human, the situ¬ations sometimes frighteningly real. The audience ridesa carousel of flirtation, social disrobing (and dismem¬berment for that matter), and comic gratification of thebasest and most satisfying kind. Perhaps the best com¬mentary is in the script itself when one character says:“Your style is simple and direct. It’s a theme which lessskillfully handled could’ve given offense.”It is Truscott’s entrance onto the scene which providesthe play with its best lines. As the situation deterio¬rates into absurdity, an increasingly confused and tor¬mented Mr. McLeavy asks “Is the World mad? Tell meit’s not”, to which Truscott replies: “I’m not paid toquarrel with accepted facts.” Jack McLaughlin-Gray ismarvelous as Truscott, maintaining the officious stupidi¬ty and illogical authority of his character. Truscott is theclassic petty fascist authority type so well used by JohnCleese in Monty Python; his methods are ruthless andcruel — but funny. He is a fool with power who ultimate¬ly preaches against the police by exemplifying them tothe point of absurdity.In counterpoint to Truscott is Joe Van Slyke’s Hal, an eager but somehow incongruously timid young man,who is a poor criminal because of his inability to lie. Halis a mechanism for Orton’s attack on Catholic guilt, re¬pression of the most seminal human urges. Fay, playedto exquisite hypocrisy by Ingrid Blekys, provides themost marvelously engaging unity of opposites. She is atonce lascivious and greedy like Hal and Dennis, andmore diligently obedient to authority and (mechanical)piety than either Truscott or Mr. McLeavy.Pauline Brailsford has done an admirable job ofbringing the cast together in this very difficult play.Every line is at once biting criticism and searing darkhumor. Not only are the characters carefully definedwithin the vaguely elastic realism of the scenario, butthey also olay off of one another well. Brailsford has let the brilliance of the script carry the play where itshould, and kept the temptation to go for belly laughsunder control.Besides, it’s so nice not to have her on stage for once. Ialso applaud Court for having the gonads to do this playin their Classics 5 season. The human animal is let looseamidst the accumulated garbage of centuries of civiliza¬tion, and the result is everywhere hilarity and libera¬tion. As each sacred cow (and a lot of them are stillsacred today — the whole thing breathes a little heavilyon our necks for us to dismiss it as the parody of thingspast) is systematically butchered, the barriers circum¬scribing moern life tumble. More than catharsis, thisplay releases a freedom and joy that is so often trappedwithin the social garb of the individual.Sponsored by U.C. Students For IsraelCELEBRATE YOM HA’ATZMAUTISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY BASH!Dinner! Israeli Singing and Dancing!Movei, “Sailah” - a hilarious look at Israeli Society!A presentation by Students For Israel!SUNDAY APRIL 17 IDA NOYES HALL 3rd FLR.TIME: 5:30 PM (MOVIE: 8:30) COST: $2.50MONDAY APRIL 18. Israeli Dancing on the Quads at NoonThe University of ChicagoEarly Music SeriesTHEHILLIARD ENSEMBLESunday, April 17 8:00 p.m.Mandal Hall - 57th & University AvenueS9 (UC student, S5) Tickets and information at Department ofMusic Concert Office • Goodspeed Hall 310 • 5845 S. Ellis,Chicago, 60637 • 962-8068 / and at the Mandel Hall TicketCenter one week preceding the concert 962-7300 The University of ChicagoAlumni AssociationpresentsLIFE AFTER GRADUATION:Communications and the Mediaan informal discussion of careers incommunications for interested studentsGUESTSRonald DorfmanEditor, The QuillSociety of Professional Journalists* Sherry GoodmanSpecial Assistant to the President for 50th AnniversaryMuseum of Science and IndustryJames YuengerDirector, News and InformationUniversity of Chicago12 noon, Wednesday, April 20, 1983Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn AvenueBring your own lunch (Beverages provided)• PARTY FRIDAY •W/ OBS!FRI • APRIL 15 * 9pm-lam m it m r i 111111 rrrr r. Tonight at 7:00 and 9:30 pm: Arnold Schwartzenegger hacks andslashes his way to personal fulfillment in John Milius’ bloodand thunder epic, CONAN THE BARBARIAN.Saturday at 7:00 and 9:30 pm: A Cockney ‘Godfather’ fights tohold on to his crumbling crime empire in the tough, taut Britishdrama THE LONG GOOD FRIDAY.Sunday at 8:00 pm: Volker Schlondorff’s meditation on ter¬rorism, journalistic responsibility, and love among the ruins,CIRCLE OF DECEIT, starring Bruno Ganz and HannaSchygulla.All shows in Cobb Hall. 5811 S. Ellis Ave.Separate admission is $2.00. “Conan theBarbarian” is rated R—no one under 17admitted. For more information, call our24-hour Doc Filmline, or consult FOCUS,the U of C’s only 20-page Englishlanguage film quarterlyI I I I I I DOC FILMS 172—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALWOMEN'S HISTORYThe Women’s History exhibit at theHyde Park Historical Society chartsthe contributions of women to the de¬velopment of Hyde Park. It deals withwomen’s achievements in the fields ofeducation and politics, as well as theirinvolvement in the church, phi¬lanthropy, entertainment, the artsand local trade. The exhibit is small,and at times rather brief in its docu¬mentation (especially, I felt, in thedisplay on the Women’s Building atthe 1893 World’s Columbian Exhib-tion, an event which involved manytalented and skilled women — thebuilding itself was designed by the21-year-old architect, Sophia Hay¬den). But it manages to cover the livesa great many local women whoproved themselves exceptional fortheir times, and deserve greater rec¬ognition.Some interesting facts emerge —for instance, in 1937 the Hyde ParkLeague of Women Voters refused toendorse the Equal Rights Amendmentfor fear that women might lose theprotection of existing legislation (aposition the group no longer holds, ofcourse). And in 1893, 40% of theteachers at the Hyde Park High Schoolwere women, even though the Year¬book makes scant mention of them ortheir female pupils.It is in the section on higher educa¬ tion that the exhibit becomes particu¬larly interesting, as we witness thestruggle of women to have theirachievements rewarded by the Uni¬versity of Chicago, which for years re¬fused to employ women (includingwomen with a top grade Law de¬gree?!) except in the division of HomeEconomics, and gave preference totheir husbands under strict ‘nepotismrules’ — no two members of the samefamily could be hired. At the start ofthe exhibit one has the feeling thatwomen’s identities are viewedthrough the public image of their hus¬bands, and there is referencethroughout to the men these womenchose to marry. But not all the hus¬bands were as repressive of theirwives’ talent as the university triedto be — Maria Goeppert Mayer, jointwinner of the 1963 Nobel Prize forphysics, almost abandoned her PhDwhen she married, but her husbandJoseph persuaded her to finish, say¬ing that he would not pay for domes¬tic help unless she continued her stu-dies. Reversing the usual‘marginalization’ of wives, the textcontinues “Joseph, a distinguishedchemist in his own right...’’Sophonisba Breckinridge, anotherwoman who suffered from the Univer¬sity’s refusal to give women facultypositions “because they consideredteaching a man’s work,’’ summed upthe qualities of many of the coura¬geous women featured in the exhibit — they devoted their lives to “gener¬ous purpose and public-spirited ef¬fort”. And of course the exhibit in¬cludes the achievements of HannaGray, first woman to become presi¬dent of the University.Concerning the arts, mention ismade of several living artists, includ¬ing Astrid Fuller, who painted threeof the murals in Hyde Park, all on fe¬minist themes. And there is ElizabethMerrian, the first organizer of theHyde Park Art Center, whose contri¬bution to the careers of many Chicagoartists is undisputed.There are, of course, gaps. In theWorld’s Columbian display, there is apicture of Ida B. Wells Barnett, ablack women who criticised the exhib¬ition for not including the work ofenough black women. Unfortunatelythe same criticism can be levelled atthis exhibit, which features remark¬ably few black women. So although itattempts to correct the tendency ofhistory to ignore women’s contribu¬tions, it remains firmly rooted in thewhite middle class and academicworld. However, for anyone interest¬ed in local history this exhibition isdefinitely worth a visit, and a closereading of some of the displays. (Forthe ‘express’ visitor, the curatorshave underscored in yellow the mostrevelant and amusing passages).Until May 29th, Hyde Park HistoricalSociety, 5500 Lake Park. Open Sat10-12, Sun 2-4. Free. — MPMUSICThe Hilliard Ensemble from England.Singers include David Jones, coun¬tertenor; Paul Elliot, tenor; LeighNixon, tenor; and Paul Hillier, bari¬tone, performing vocal music fromthe 12th to Early 19th Centuries. SunApr 17 at 8 in Mandel Hall. Tickets$9 (UC Student, $5) and will beavailable at the Mandel Hall TicketCenter beginning at 7.The Noontime Concert Series will fea¬ture Ellen Harris, soprano, and BruceTammen, baritone. Accompanied byRobert Morgan, they will performSchumann duets. Thur Apr 21 at12:15 in Goodspeed Recital Hall.Free.Total Eclipse Shelton Salley is a localguitarist and songwriter whose pastassociations range from Minnie Rip-perton to Bobby “Blue” Bland to AriBrown. His present association iswith the Total Eclipse Band, a versa¬tile group of experienced musicianswho blend various trends of contem¬porary music with an emphasis onthe funk of it. Adding a direct jazztransfusion is special guest CurtisBlack on trumpet. Disc jockey BillJordan provides dance music be¬tween sets. Something for everyone.This Saturday, April 16th at 10 pmat the Blue Gargoyle, 5655 S. Uni¬versity. Admission is just $2 withstudent i.d., $3 for others.Clay Midgets and the Rhythm Dates willplay a benefit for the Blue Gar¬goyle. (No alcohol served.) 57th andUniversity. Tonight at 10. $1.Chicago Chamber Orchestra DieterKober directs works of Mozart, Bachand Handel. Fri Apr 15 at 8, RichardJ. Daley College, 7500 S. Pulaski;Sun Apr 17 at 3:30, Grace EpiscopalChurch, Oak Park; and Thurs Apr 21at 12, Univ. of Illinois, CircleCampus. 922-5570. Free.American Chamber Symphony finishesthis season with Mozart, Straussand Ibert compositions. The pro¬gram’s special feature is “The Dis¬tant Shore” by Robert Carl, thework which won the ASC NationalComposers Competition. Fri Apr 15and Sat Apr 16 at 8. Tickets $11 to$18. Civic Opera House, 20 N.Wacker. 236-7374.MISCChicago City Ballet Maria Tallchief’sfledgling company presents a vari¬ety of dances choreographed eitherby George Ballanchine or by its ownartistic director, Paul Mejia. Princi¬pal dancers are Suzanne Farrell andlb Anderson, both New York CityBallet principals. Note: the perfor¬mances of Apr 18 through 24 havebeen cancelled. Tickets will be hon¬ored at the Apr 13-17 dates.Through Sun Apr 17 at 8, 2 pm mati¬nee on Sat. Tickets $5 to $25. Audi¬torium Theatre, 70 E. Congress Park¬way. 922-6634.Middle Eastern Dinner Enjoy the finefood of the Middle East with compli¬mentary beverages and musical en¬tertainment. I-House dining room,Wed Apr 20, 4:30 - 7:30.Armenian Party sponsored by the U of CArmenian Students Association withan authentic Armenian band. I-House Assembly Hall, Sat Apr 16,9-1. $2.FILMConan the Barbarian (John Milius, 1981)Fri Apr 15, 7 and 9:30. $2. Doc.The Long Good Friday (John MacKen-zie, 1979) Sat Apr 16, 7 and 9:30.$2. Doc. Casablanca (Michael Curtiz, 1943) Seeit again, Sam. Sat Apr 16 at 7:15and 9:30, Sun Apr 17 at 8:30. $2.LSF. —KKEl Pueblo Vencera (Diego de la Tex-tera, 1980) El Puebio Vencera (ThePeople Will Win) is a dramatic andmoving film about the struggle ofthe Salvadoran people against anoppressive government. The filmwas made by Salvadorans involvedin the struggle, and moves graceful¬ly between the harsh political situa¬tion in El Salvador and the beauty ofthat country’s landscape and peo¬ple. An important theme is the con¬fident determination of the Salva¬doran people in the face ofoverwhelming adversity. A post¬script suggests the clandestine con¬ditions under which the film wasmade: an old woman takes a camerafrom a young man and hides it in herbasket — presumably to be smug¬gled out of the area. The man thentakes up his gun and disappears intothe jungle. Sun Apr 17 at 7:30, IdaNoyes Library. —JCCircle of Deceit (Volker Schondorff,1980) Sun Apr 17 at 8. $2. Doc.Thrillers (Sarah Potter, 1977) Mon Apr18 at 8, and Women (Marta Mes-zaros, 1977) at 8:30. $2. Doc.Experiment in Terror (Blake Edwards,1962) Tues Apr 19 at 8. $2. Doc.The Children’s Hour (William Wyler,1961) Wed Apr 20 at 8. $2. Doc.Too Hot to Handle (Jack Conway, 1938)Wed Apr 20 at 9:15. $2. LSF.Rebellion in Patagonia (Hector Olivera,1974) Thurs Apr 21 at 8. $2. Doc.La Dolce Vita (Federico Fellini, 1960)Thurs Apr 21 at 8. $2. I-House.Gaslight (George Cukor, 1944) ThursApr 21 at 8:30. $2. LSF.Acid Rain, Acid From Heaven, and No Act of God. All produced by the Natl.Film Board of Canada, the first twowere labeled propaganda by the U.S. Justice Dept. The films examineissues of nuclear power. Fri Apr 15and Sat Kpr 16 at 4, 5:30, 7 and8:30; also at 10 on Sat. Tickets $3.Facets Multimedia, 1517 W. Fuller¬ton. 281-4114.Guardian Knot (Frank Garvy, 1982) A‘video opera’ about the problems ofthe citizens of Mound, a mythic citycreated by the gods from an ant hill.Sun Apr 17 at 7. Tickets $3, 2 drinkminimum. Cross Currents, 3206 N.Wilton. 472-7778.Ann Arbor Film Festival. The winningfilms of this year’s competition forexperimental 8mm films will bescreened Sun Apr 17 and Mon Apr18 from 6 to 10. School of the Art In¬stitute, Columbus and Jackson.443-3710.ARTStreet Scenes This collection of anumber of apparently quick-cut butalso evidently thoughtfully con¬structed B&W photos by John Probesof the nearby world will be seen onthe second floor of Harper sometimein the next seven days, assuming theartist can retrieve the prints fromhis Northside space. Modest goal:sell enough to afford a new box ofpaper. Check it out.Daniel Buren Intersecting Axes. Burenhas painted stripes like these for 15years and they still don’t look likepaintings. Each “proposition” is, ac¬cording to its producer, intended torepresent nothing other than itself;each tries to exhibit the “zero de¬gree” of form. Further, the continu¬ing allegiance to alternating stripesof white and color, in this case,orange, obliges the viewer to seenot ‘orange’ but simply ‘color’. Final¬ly, the installation of the piece issite-specific, and draws attention tothe contingent character of the veryinstitution that holds out its claim tothe status of art. To call the piece it¬self either ugly or beautiful clearlythrows into reverse conventional un¬derstanding of these terms, and weshouldn’t be surprised to learn thatthis is another of the artist’s inten¬tions. Through 4 May at the Renais¬sance Society Bergman Gallery, 4thfloor Cobb. Tue-Sat, 10-4; Sun, noon-4 . 962-8670. Free. —DMMedieval and Renaissance CeramicsThrough 24 Apr at the Smart Gal¬lery, 5550 Greenwood. Tue-Sat,10-4; Sun, noon-4. 753-2123. Free.Paul McAlpin Paintings and drawings.MFA show opens tonight at 5;through 21 Apr at Midway Studios,6016 Ingleside: Mon-Fri, 9-5.753-4821. Free.The Additive Process Ruth Migdal, DanMills, Alice Shaddle, Gail Skudera.and Cameron Zebrun. Opens Sun 17Apr, 5-7 at the Hyde Park ArtCenter, 1701 E 53rd. Through 25May: Tue-Sat, 1 1 -5. 324-5520.Free.International Student Exhibition. Allmedia show by 15 foreign SAIC stu¬dents. Opens tonight, 4:30-6 at theSchool of the Art Institute, Columbusat Jackson. Through 13 May: Mon-Wed, Fri, Sat, 10:30-4:30; Thur,10:30-7:30; Sun, noon-4:30.443-3710. Free.In the Fields and “We ll Never TurnBack”. The former, an exhibit of con¬sidered photos of illegal Californiafarm workers; the latter, a travel¬ing exhibit of stop-action photos ofevents during the civil rights move¬ment. In other words, two differentviews of the effects of racism. Boththrough 23 Apr at Columbia College.600 S Michigan. Mon-Fri, 10-5; Sat,noon-5. 663-1600 ext 104. FreePaul Strand Retrospective of one of thegolden boys of American art photo¬graphy in its last full week. Through24 Apr at the Art Institute, Michiganat Adams. Mon-Wed, Fri,10:30-4:30; Thur, 10:30-6; Sat. 10-5;Sun, noon-5. 443-3500. Admissiondiscretionary except Thur, free.Perspectives on Contemporary RealismOne medium-sized gallery packedfull of mostly figurative drawingsand watercolors, all from a singleprivate collection. Is resale an issue?Through 28 May at the Art Institute;info above.Ansel Adams An American Place, 1936A recreation of Adams' first NewYork showing by Alfred Stieglitz,about which the latter's grandniece,Sue Davidson Lowe, writes in her re¬cent memoir/biography, Stieglitz:"Adams's show...gained wide andprofitable acceptance Expecting thecritics to react with ’90% slams. 9%milky comment, and 1% approval,’Adams was astonished to receive afar heavier proportion of both praise and dollars” (p. 345). Opens16 Apr at the Art Institute; infoabove.Naive and Outsider Painting from Ger¬many. “Insider” artists often wincewhen they hear painting describedas therapeutic. In the case of the“outsiders,” however, “therapy”clearly fits. Many of these artiststurn to painting while ill or as a re¬lease from stress. The paintings arefantasies, whether of Germany's fu¬ture or past, or of an imaginedworld. If dreams are a mechanismfor resolving conflict, this art in itsescapism similarly resembles an at¬tempt to remake the world. Theseartists, many of them in their six¬ties, were children of the ThirdReich. Some painters narrate ac¬counts of themselves as children inHitler’s Germany. Others paint con¬temporary industrial Germany, asone might imagine a naive GeorgeGrosz would paint, with a criticalview of a corrupt world. On thewhole, however, the art resemblesthe free fantasy of children’s books.The outsider painters, unconcernedas they are about their place in themodernist arts, are obsessed withthe place of the individual in theworld. And in the similarity of out¬sider art, be it fantasy or crude real¬ism, we see the similarity of ourdreams and their expression.Through 22 May at the Museum ofContemporary Art, 237 E Ontario.Tue-Sat, 10-5; Sun, noon-5.280-2660. $2 except Tue, free-SSKenneth Josephson Serious showing ofmedium-conscious B&W photo¬graphy. Through 22 May at the Mu¬seum of Contemporary Art; infoabove.Four Be One Sharon Vincent Porter ssculpture installation consists of fourseparate, very disturbing uprightcoffin-sized boxes Two are playfulvariations of shower stalls; another,a red hot (in color) oven with racks ofpeople-shaped cookies baking, sug¬gests a gas chamber; and the fourth,“Earth Aspect”, looks like an ima¬gined electric chair equipped withbelt, institutional overhead lightand stylized lines of electricityacross the top. The spaces appear tobe waiting to be occupied; doorsslam and lock; ovens, showers andelectricity turn on; props in a badcontinued on page 4Grey City Journal 4/15/83Staff: 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, AbbyScher, 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.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—3continued from page 3dream, or horror movie; scary. Thebasement reassures: Neel Webber’sinstallation of long, thin sticks hangin parallel lines from barely percep¬tible wires across the dimly lit space.Somewhat maze-like and slightlydisorienting but fun. Webber ar¬ranges a collection of his currentworkings — notes, sketches, photo¬graphs, acquired objects, and combi¬nations of all of the above — in asmaller, adjacent space. Occupation,artist; medium, junk. Endearinglyso...Also upstairs, Joyce Rebora’s"The Bound Tree Series” which is ex¬actly that — drawings of burlapbound roots of trees. Not very inter¬esting — they might look good hang¬ing in the hallway, or enclosedporch, of some suburban home.Through 30 Apr at ARC Gallery, 6 WHubbard. Tue-Sat, 11-5. 226-7607.Free. — LKtes Levine Five large, mostly black,grey, red. and yellow-orange bill¬boards. Simple, flat, bold, recogniz¬able images with one-word mes¬sages. AIM and a picture of a deer,RACE and a horse, TAKE and a crane,and FORGET and a line of elephants.Proposals for actual outdoor roadsigns. Also: photographs and draw¬ings from Levine’s 1982 project inN.Y.C. subways. One photo-poster ofan oriental man and woman with“We Are Not Afraid” printed acrossit was placed in each of the 4,800N.Y.C. subway cars for one month.Levine documented the direct and in¬direct reactions of passengers. Inthese and similar works Levine at¬tempts to redefine and relocate artin the mass media. Through 30 Aprat N.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W Hubbard.Tue-Sat, 11-5. 467-6550. Free. — LKGroup Show Paintings and construc¬tions. Through 30 Apr at ArtemisiaGallery, 9 W Hubbard. Tue-Sat,11-5. 751-2016. Free.Galerie Die Wand of Hamburg, Ger¬many. Drawings and paintings.Opens tonight, 6-8 at NAB Gallery, Lea Levine: Coming soon to a billboard near you?331 S Peoria. Through 31 May: Tue,Sat, 11:30-4:30 . 733-0886. Free.Artpolice Painting, drawing, and comicbook art by the Minneapolis-basedcollective. Some amusing, some of¬fensive; more than anyone couldcomfortably read. Through 9 May atRandolph Street Gallery, 756 N Mil¬waukee Tue-Sat, 11-5 243-7717.Free. Participatory performance,R.A. Daulton’s “Jukebox Guillo¬tine", tonight and tomorrow at 8;S3, $2 students. Dress up. Mon, 18Apr: Nigel Rolfe performance, alsoat 8, same prices.Pattern Developing Two separate pro¬grams of performance art, music,and (tonight only) video. Tonightand tomorrow beginning at 8 at theNoise Factory, 1019 W Lake.733-5245. $2; $3 both nights.BYOB.Edith Aitman drawings and paintings; and Charles Wilson, mixed-mediasculpture and installation. Through14 May at Marianne Deson Gallery,340 W Huron. Tue-Fri, 10-5:30; Sat,11-5. 787-0005. Free.Phyllis Bramson Paintings in the sur¬realist mode. Opens tonight,5:30-7:30 at Dart Gallery, 155 EOhio. Through 11 May: Tue-Fri,10-5:30; Sat, noon-5. 787-6366.Free.Richard Hull Paintings. Opens tonight,5-7 at Phyllis Kind Gallery, 313 WSuperior. Through 11 May: Tue-Sat,10-5:30. 642-6302. Free.Michael Goldberg and Lynn Umlauf.Paintings. Through 10 May at YoungHoffman Gallery, 215 W Superior.Tue-Sat, 10-5:30. 951-8828. Free. £Jim Brinsfield and Mark Forth. Paint- =ings. Through 27 Apr at Nancy Lurie *Gallery, 1632 N LaSalle. Tue-Sat, ^11-5. 337-2882. Free. £GUARNERI STRING QUARTET: 3 DIFFERENT ERASGuarneri String Quartet. Chamber MusicSeries, Friday, April 8, 1983 at MandelHall. Arnold Steinhardt, violin; John Dai¬ley, violin; Michael Tree, viola; DavidSoyer, cello.Program: Mozart; Quartet in D Major,K.499; Barber; Quartet, Opus 11; Beetho¬ven: Quartet in B-flat Major, Opus 130.by Elaine GuregianThe Guarneri Quartet delivered a per¬formance last Friday at Mandel Hall thatlived up to its high standard of excellence.In recent years, it has seemed that a smallamount of technical roughness was theprice a listener had to pay for the eccentricexcitement of a live performance by thisgroup. This was not the case in last week’sperformance. Led by the sure intonationand phrasing of first violinist ArnoldSteinhardt, members of the group playedsecurely, and parts locked together easi¬ly. The program — late Mozart, late Beeth¬oven, and early Samuel Barber — waswell balanced. It was interesting in that itshowed each composer leaning into dif¬ferent eras, Mozart and Beethoven push¬ing forward from their earlier styles andBarber looking back toward Romanticismwithout a trace of twentieth century jaun¬dice. While the Barber doesn’t carry theweight of either of the other two pieces, itsown charms (and the players’ sensitivityto them) made it a pleasant interlude.The Barber Quartet is probably recog¬nizable to most people from the string or¬chestra transcription the composer madeof its second movement, titled Adagio forStrings. The densely scored Adagio themeis heard predominantly in the low regis¬ters, and the quartet members brought outits dark lyricism without sentimentalizingit. This was an achievement, given alf therepetitions of the theme. Barber is nomatch for Beethoven in transforming tnemes; here, he merely passes the melodybetween players without varyjng it signi¬ficantly.The Mozart Quartet in D major, K.499 isone of Mozart’s late quartets, composed in1786 in Vienna. Its complex harmonic lan¬guage and livelier rhythms give it a morerobust character than the early works. Theensemble members played with a unifiedconcept of the style, although in the lastmovement Steinhardt's tone coarsened in¬explicably and inappropriately. Still, bet¬ter that than making the music sound roco¬co. The group brought out inner parts in awell-balanced reading that avoided suchpreciousness.The high point of the concert was theBeethoven Quartet in B-flat Major, Opus130. Beethoven’s quartets became in¬creasingly chromatic and complex with thepassing years, and performing this workoffered the Guarnari the sort of challengethey meet best. Formally, the piece is diffi¬ cult for a listener to assimilate, since in¬stead of the standard classical progres¬sion of four movements it has sixmovements. Movement markings such as“alia danza tedesca” and “Cavatina”show Beethoven’s interest in writing indance and vocal styles as well as in ab¬stract instrumental styles. Perhaps in aneffort to suggest a vocal line, Steinhardtcolored his tone in the Cavatina in a waythat set it off distinctively from the otherlines. By beginning with the stark timbreof no vibrato, then adding vibrato deli¬berately, he called attention to the poten¬tial the player has for making expressivealterations in the sound.The other members of the quartet fol¬lowed Steinhardt closely, although he wasthe only one to make such idiosyncraticgestures. Cellist David Soyer was less thancompletely alert, sometimes letting his in¬tonation slip slightly and not alwaysbringing out his lines as aggressively as heshould have to provide a firm bass supportor to take his turn with the melody. Thesewere only minor flaws, though, in an other¬wise outstanding performance.4—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL■ ■EXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES * MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONINGENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TOPARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241-622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLECANCER How you livemay save your life. *AMERICANCANCERSOCIETY*The Chicago Literary Review seeks■■m.iff ESSAYS ON LITERATUREfrom students in the University,ftf! graduate or under graduateWe welcome articles on any topic of generali Hii p§ interest in a casual but informed format.Please submit ideas or finished pieces in theCLR editor’s box in the Maroon Office, 3rdf§§ fir. Ida Noyes Hall. Suggested length: 5-10IfH pages, double-spaced. ITALIAN WINESALE(4-15-83 thru 4-21-83)Take this great opportunity to enjoy some of the fine wines from Italy for your dining or socialpleasures at low sale prices. These wines will be featured on display along with available samplesfor tasting.REDS1975 Brunello di Mon Talcino (Poggio Alle Mura)One of the great growths produced from the noble Brunello grape in picturesqueMontalcino Austere while young, superb with age$11.99 Case $136.001977 Amarone Recioto Della Valpolicella (Anselmi)Wine of great depth and grace, soft fruit character$7.99 Case $91.991979 Chianti Classico Riserva (LeBocce)It’s been a long time since a great chianti has reached the American winemarket LeBocce has proven that chianti does not have to be in a wicker basketto sell.Case $72.00$6.391981 Chianti, Estate Bottled (Cignano)Fine red chianti wine produced and bottled by Giovanni Bianchi.$4.99 Case $57.001979Cabernet Sauvignon (La Fornarina)A dry red wine with a distinct vinous and herbaceous perfume and well-roundedbody and flavour$6.59 Case $75.001974 Barolo Riserva Speciale (Bertolo)750 ML. $10.691974 Bargaresco Riserva Speciale (Bertolo)750 ML. $10.69Grignolino d’Asti (Bertolo)750 ML. $ 7 • 79WHITESPinot Grigio Di Annone (La Fornarina)A dry white wine with an unmistakable ethereal perfume and a slight hint of Acaciaflowers' delicately velvety flavour$4.09 Case $46.001981 Sauvignon Blanc, Collio (La Fornarina)A dry white wine that goes especially we!! with soups, souffles, vegetable pies andegg dishes$5.29 Case $60.001980Vernaccia di San Gimignano (Pietraserena)Produced and bottled by Bruno Arrigoni. A wine of extraordinary finesse, fastbecoming one of the most popular wines imported from Italy$4.09 Case $46.00Tocai Di Lison (La Fornarina)Estate bottled. A dry white wine with a delicate scent of peach leaves and anagreeably bitterish taste.$4.09 Case $46.001981Plozner Chardonnay750 ML. $4.55Dolce Vita Tosso (or) Bianco1.5 Liter $3,99Corvo Bianco ^7so ml. 3 for $10.00 $4.29 ea.ROSECASTEL DEL MONTERIVER ROSE750 ML. $3.89 -BRING IN AD -Coupon Special(One Day On/y)10% OFF ALL WINES4/15/83KIMBARK LIQUORS & WINE SHOPPE1214 E. 53rd St. In Kimbark Plaza 493-3355. i_. Store Hours: Sun. noon - midnightMon. - Thurs. 8 a.m. -1 a.m. • Fri. A Sat. 8 a.m. - 2 a.m.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—5Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses72 How Much Are Your Lenses73 How Much Are Your Lenses74 How Much Are Your Lenses7What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? 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IL 60201 T566 N. Clark St., Chicago. IL 606)4(above County Seat)864-4441 880-5400 SAY GOODBYE TO THE COMP CENTERNow, enjoy the convenience and efficiency of doing your computerwork on the Dec, Ahmdahl, or commercial data bases at home (oranywhere there's a phone jack) with the Zenith ZT-1 terminal. For on y$599 you can have:• a detached, typewriter-style keyboard• a 12" green phosphor monitor• built-in modem; 110-4100 baud• automatic dialing and log on• memory for 26 phone numbers"The ZT-1 from Zenith is one of the most intelligent terminals on themarket. Its built-in prompts also make it one of the easiest to use.Radio-Electronics (April, 1983); p. 114Distributed by Computers Plus, Inc. For more information ora demonstration, call: , .r~ nnr/idays: 452-0066evenings: 548-1755 (Mike) 241-6155 (Natalie)(on-campus representatives)Mastercharge/Visa accepted. Quantity pricing available.Run the Streets of Scenic Hyde ParkTheHyde ParkGargoyle Gallop10,000 meter (6.2 mile) courseDate: May 1, 1983Time: 8 amRace starts and finishes at the University Church, 57th Street andUniversity Avenue.Entry Fee: $6 advance - $8 day of raceT-shirt included with feeBenefit for the Blue Gargoyle Youth Service AgencyFor more information call: 363-2175- 955-4108Prizes will be awarded in different age groups and overall.Mail $6 and completed entry to: Gargoyle Gallop 10KBlue Gargoyle Youth Ctr.Mail-ins due by April 29th.PrintNAMElastADDRESSCITYPHONE.AGE ON RACE DAY-BIRTHDATE / first middleSTATESEX 5655 University AvenueChicago, II 60637In consideration of my entry in theGargoyle Gallop 10K, I, the undersignedhereby, for myself, my heirs, executors,administrators, indemnify, waive,release, and hold harmless all officials,sponsors, agents, and merchants, thatare in any way connected with the race,from any claims or dangers arising fromor out of my participation and travel torace.ZIP.(m or f)T-SHIRT SIZE(cotton/poly) (s,m,l,xl) SIGNATUREAmnesty Internationalwill present a debate onTHE DEATH PENALTYSpeakers FOR the death penalty will be:William P. O’Connor, Assistant States Attorney, Felony Trial DivisionDaniel Hales, Attorney, and Vice-President of the Americans for Effective LawEnforcementSpeakers AGAINST the death penalty will be:James F. Bresnahan, S.J., Co-Director of the Ethics in Medical Practice Pro¬gram, Northwestern University Medical SchoolJohn Moran, Attorney, and Member of the Illinois Coalition Against the DeathPenaltyModerator: Robert M. Franklin, Instructor in Ethics and Society, University>of ChicagoTUESDAY • APRIL 19 • 7:30 PMSWIFT LECTURE HALLReception Follows6—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALTom Stoppard’s 7Up Am/ Inspector Houndby David BrooksDuring the twenties and thirties, theglory days of University of Chicago stu¬dent theater, faculty members such asThornton Wilder and James Weber Linnhelped produce plays by undergraduateslike James T. Farrel and Robert Ardrey.The newly created Concrete Gothic Theatertook a giant step toward recreating theexcitement of those days with its firstproduction. The Victors. It stumbled a bitwith its second offering, but now, with TheReal Inspector Hound, the company hasagain taken a leap toward its goal, thecreation of a successful student theater.The Real Inspector Hound is about a pairof drama critics (Moon, an intellectual sec¬ond-string reviewer in the midst of con¬templating his superiority to the numberone man, and Birdboot, a middlebrow mer¬cenary whose love for the theater is depo¬sited on its pretty, young starlets) who areat the opening of an Agatha Christie-typemystery play. We see the play within theplay develop into a delightful parody ofmediocre drama complete with featherduster-carrying servants spewing out un-wieldly bits of exposition. The maid picksup a ringing phone and announces, “Hello,the drawing room of Lady Muldoon’scountry residence one morning in earlyspring?” On the side we watch the criticsrolling out the alphabet of dramatic clichesand pomposities. Naturally, the critics andthe play intertwine, and I could tell you how, but it wouldn’t make sense anyway.The play overflows with the swift word¬play and the disintegration of theatricalconvention that fans of playwright TomStoppard have come to expect. It lacks,however, the metaphysical overtoneswhich flavored Stoppard’s best plays, Ro- sencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead andTravesties. I think it suffers by the lack.When the play drags — and toward theend it does — it is because beyond the clev¬er satire there is really nothing of inter¬est. Stoppard must take time out to movethe play within a play along. During those scenes there is no catharsis because thecharacters are flat parodies; and there isno suspense, because the rational webthat surrounds good mysteries has beentorn into farce. Even the sparkling charac¬ters, the critics, lose some of their veneerwhen they become enmeshed in the playthey are watching. Directors Geoff Potterand Mindy Greenstein have given the playa leisurely pace, but it is the bits of storywhich are slow, not the wonderfully timedcomic pauses.Mark Hollman and Dan Staley as the twocritics are magnificent. They make theircharacters seem at once appealing and co¬mically absurd. Their exchanges duringthe first third of the play are worth twicethe price of admission. Marianne Currie(the servant) and Dawn Brennan (LadyCynthia Muldoon) have captured the spiritof parody of the play within a play andpull off their roles very well. Tim Munn,whose energy made him so wonderful inThe Victors, seems miscast as the stereo¬typed retired British officer. Somebodywith that much vigor shouldn’t be playingan old man.Despite occasional slow moments, TheReal Inspector Hound is a sparklinglywitty play. In its inaugural season, Con¬crete Gothic has established itself as thesponsor of excellent productions. The playis being presented in Reynolds Club The¬ater on April 15, 16, 21, 22, and 23 at 8pm. Tickets are $2.50 for students and$3.00 for everybody else.AN INTERVIEW WITH DANn mrmi i itiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiDan Georgakas sits fingering his large,greying walrus moustache. A versatileman whose works include a series of inves¬tigative essays on Detroit, and a book ofpoetry, he most recently has bridged abarrier across two art forms: cinema andliterature. The Cineaste Interviews, a col¬lection of interviews taken from the filmmagazine Cineaste, attempts to show theconnection between art and politics in theworld of film. In the preface, Georgakasstates that he has tried to emphasize thefilms themselves rather than the actors,and specific ideas rather than generaliti¬es. In addition, his interviews have fo¬cused on the use of abstract concepts asmanifested in particular films.Georgakas’ flexibility may influencehim in expanding his horizons. Which fieldwill he enter next? Even Georgakas him¬self is unsure. Interview conducted by Ra¬chel Shteir.RS: Mr. Georgakas, could you explain howyou evolved from writing something likeDetroit: I Don't Mind Dying to The CineasteInterviews and your work on Cineaste?DG: I don’t really call it an evolution. Itwas more of a simultaneous occurrence. Icall myself a European intellect^ becauseI feel that European intellectual don’t ca¬tegorize themselves in the same way thatAmerican intellectuals do. They have amuch broader perspective. My formaltraining is in history, which involves learn¬ing a lot about interviewing techniquesand oral history. But I’m also a creativewriter; I’ve written a book of poetry.I enjoy dabbling in all of these otherforms because I feel that the social aspectsof art and the cultural aspects of historyshould be combined. Every film has a socialdimension and a political dimension. Some¬times it’s difficult to separate the politicalaspect from the cultural one.RS: Were you with the magazine Cineastewhen it began?DG: No. The founder was a film student atNYU: Cineaste was originally a studentmagazine. For the first two years, it was astapled mimeod sheet.RS: How does Cineaste compare in respect¬ability with some of the other film maga¬zines?DG: Well, I would say we took the longroad to respectability. To be respected inthe world of film magazines, you have tobe in a publication calld the InternationalFilm Guide, which only includes what theyconsider serious journals. Within thisguide, there are two sections, a front sec¬tion and a back section. We recently weremoved from the front section to the backsection.Another indication of our success is thatwe are consistently referred to by othermagazines. People who write for us arecalled upon to endorse books, and to lec¬ ture at colleges.RS: How does Cineaste differ from theseother journals?DG: In the beginning, we covered politicalEuropean films which other people nevercovered. We talked to directors on theirown political beam and we realized thatthese films must be taken in context withthe time they were made and with thecountry they were made in. We try to findan “expert” in the field to talk to the in¬terviewee so that the resulting interviewis unique. Our reviews are reactive; bythis I mean that they are our view alone,not someone else’s view hashed over.Many of the other film journals are res¬tricted because they are owned by institu¬tions which control them. We can attack theacademy with vigor because we are inde¬pendent. If we feel something is wrong, westate it emphatically. We don’t have toplay games.RS: Your new book appears to be predo¬minantly about European and South Amer¬ican directors. Is there any particular rea¬son for this?DG: Well, to begin with, Hollywood peopledon’t give good interviews. They give P.R.interviews and Cineaste can’t competewith Johnny Carson or Phil Donahue. Nordo we want to. In addition, many Americanfilmmakers are solely producing docu¬mentaries, which I am going to try to coverin depth in another book.RS: Do you feel that American cinema as awhole is inferior to European cinema? DG: Non-US filmmakers are politicallymore sophiscated. There’s more room inEurope for a national theater — but youmust remember that there are plenty ofHollywood type movies being made inEurope — as an American viewer, you justdon’t see them. What you see is the creamof the crop. Europe provides a wider arenafor art and political film. Italian cinemahas produced the best work of the last de¬cade because their recent cultural life andsocial history is so rich.RS: It is a common opinion that repressedsocieties produce better art. How do youfeel about this attitude?DG: What produces good art is a rich cul¬tural life. Repressive societies get a lot ofpeople killed. The Greek dictatorship, forexample, dealt a serious blow to Greekcinema. I don’t understand how a repres¬sive society such as Poland has been ableto develop so many acclaimed films. Japanand India will always produce better filmsthan China because their societies arefreer. It’s the cultural climate which allowsthings to happen.RS: What do you look for when you go tosee a movie?DG: I don't want to think too much. I wantto sit back and experience the movie. If Istart noticing the acting or the cameraangles, then I become analytical and Iknow something isn’t right. The ideal situ¬ation is to see a film twice; once to feel itand a second time to dissect it. That, ofcourse, would warrant an exceptional GEORGAKASfilm, of which there are few. Missing,Alexander the Great, which will be re¬leased in Chicago in the spring, Last Tangoin Paris, and, you may laugh, Casablanca,are some.Let me use a metaphor. A film is likemagic. A good one presents a beautiful il¬lusion which makes you believe and a badone forces you to immediately notice thatthe entire thing is a hoax.RS: Do you believe that films can effectpeople to the extreme that Taxi Driver didto John Hinkley?DG: There are some people who are so psy¬chotic that a dog barking would set themoff. I believe that one film alone cannot in¬fluence anybody to that extreme. Psycho¬tic people are predisposed; they want anexcuse to be psychotic; they see a movieand they say “ah ha, that’s how I can doit.”A strand of films, however, can havethat effect. When you see enough of a filmwhich is blatantly violent or sexual, youbecome imbued in that direction. A steadydiet of violence provokes a lot of JohnHinkleys.RS: Have you ever considered making amovie?DG: I've wanted to write scripts, but that'sthe most thankless task in creation. Thereare too many people involved for it to looklike yours when you’re finished. There'sthe case of scripts that are bought andnever made. I have the greatest of admi¬ration for anyone who writes scripts, butI’m not prepared for the burden. There’s alot of commercial distortion in the movieindustry that there isn’t in the publishingindustry. In a screenplay, they take ascene that you’ve set in London in 1888and change it to New York, 1915. Whenyou write a book, you can expect to see itpretty much the way you wrote it. Editorsdon’t have the time to half-like it and workon it. For a movie, there are about 15scriptwriters. I mentioned in my book thatthe best films are collaborations ratherthan the work of one person, and I try topush my own point of view too much to bewilling to work with others.RS: Could you talk a little more about theproblems of American filmmaking?DG: They have what I call the blockbustersyndrome. They all want one huge winnerrather than ten moderate successes. Thereis no room in Hollywood for a moderatelymade film. The accountants are in control.RS: What do you think the trend is in Amer¬ican film today?DG. Artists expressing political ideals. Noone is interested in specific details.They’re moving away from being apoliti¬cal and nonpolitical because they foundthat political films make money too.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—7ml Unlimited“ I'8—FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL1POLL WATCHERS NEEDED 1FOR STUDENT GOVERNMENTSPRING ELECTIONSLeave your name, number, and the time slot that you wantin the Student Government Office (Ida Noyes Hall, thirdfloor), or call Larry Ozeran at 752-1548. You can also leavea note in his box in the Medical Student Lounge in BillingsHospital.Tuesday April 1910am-l2 noon11 am-1 pm11:30am-l :30pm11:30om-l :30pm12 noon-2 pm5pm-7pm7pm-8pm7pm-8:30pm Cobb HallLaw SchoolMedical StudentLoungeReynolds ClubBusiness SchoolBurton-JudsonWoodward CourtPierce HallInternationalHouseBroadview HallShoreland Wednesday, April 209:15am-l 1:45am Cobb Hall11:30am-1:30pm12 noon-2pm ReynoldsClubBusinessSchoolUsed desks,chairs, files,and sofasBRAND 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111EQUIPMENT Open Daily 8 30-5Sat. 9-2The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983—17A Spring Linen Potpourri...NEW OWNERSHIP SALE30% OFFApril 15th to April 24th (All sales final)Wamsutta® Marimekko® Burlington®• sheets & pillow cases • matching comforters • regular, standardpillows • rainbow of towels • shower curtains • bath accessories •place mats • dish towels • pot holders• juvenile sheets & comfortersOpen Tues. thru Sat. 10 a m to 6 p m. • Sunday Noon to 5 p.m.Linen World of Hyde Park5225 S. Harper In Harper court 955-0100 The Department ofGermanic Languages and Literaturesis pleased to presenta public lecture byProfessor WULF WULFINGof the University of BochumentitledON MYTHICIZING WOMAN INTHE NINETEENTH CENTURY:THE CASE OF QUEEN LUISE OF PRUSSIATuesday, April 19, 1983 at 4:00 p.m.in Harper 103SportsMildred, Saudi Union dominate socimBy Jeff TaylorIn this season of mud-bowls and slime-slides, play has remained predictablysloppy, posing difficulties for those of uswho attempt to categorize and rate theteams. For the most part, teams that meeton the Midway-West field play soccer; thosedoomed to the Midway-East engage insomething closer to hockey without skates.A few teams have emerged dominant, how¬ever, and promise to make this “spring’s”playoff action throroughly rousing.In undergraduate play, Mildred has prov¬en itself far and away the team to beat,stomping on Hit and Run and last year’s un¬dergraduate champion Psi Upsilon in theearly going. Mildred plays a controlledgame, and forwards Luis Guerrero and JonYoon had no trouble whatsoever circum¬venting the apparently clumsy and often vi¬cious Psi U defense. Mildred is a twin-phoenix, its players rising from the ashes oftwo of last year’s teams’ defeats. The de¬fense and midfield is mostly composed ofremnants of last year’s residence champFallers, and the offense hails from the now-defunct KUUC, or the Koreans. Mildred’sonly weak point is its name, which manyplayers on the team hate.As for Psi U, the defense is suffering badly from the loss of its workhorse Bo Irevedera(sorry about the spelling, Bo). The offensetoo has lost a lot of its spark in the gradua¬tion of striker Eric Kuby; however, theteam picked up another great goal-sucker inJay Brock, leading scorer for last year’sawesome Fallers offense. Brock has beenunable to score thus far, but may becomeproductive at any time — he should join vet¬erans Sean Mahoney and David Hazelkomin taking target practice on Psi U’s next op¬ponent, Hit and Run.The Henderson A and Compton teamsboth look tough, and both sport undefeatedrecords, but a decided lack of competitionhas helped put them where they are. Theirrecords demand attention and high ranking;it remains to be seen how they will deal withthe more aggressive (and talented) teamsin the independent leagues. Though I cau¬tiously rank both Compton and Hendersonabove these independents, they may havetrouble against Amalgamation or Psi U, ifthey ever play them.This season’s surprise is the underratedArk Royal team in the Independent Red di¬vision. Largely composed of players fromlast year’s Fallers “I” (not to be confusedwith the residence champs), the team haspicked up a few wayward players and sup¬Put 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 —Community room— Wall-to-wall carpeting —Resident manager— Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indcxir or outdoor — Laundry facilities onparking each fkx)rStudios, One. Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One Bedroom from $480 — Two Bednxmi from $660Rent includes heat, c(X)king gas, and master TV' antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643-1406. 7|•» .— I !rOuse1642 East 56th StreerIn Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex, Inc. plemented its already solid defense with agood attack. The Ark Royal-Amalgamationgame, played in driving rain on the muddyMidway-East, proved a real test of nerves.The game came down to the fifth shot of ashootout, when the game winning goal snuckin off the bottom of the crossbar, booted byexhausted Ark Royal halfback Ben Jacob¬sen.The loss seems to have paralyzed poten¬tially dominant Amalgamation, who oneweek later barely edged a team it shouldhave creamed, the helpless Dinkleberries.Team captain Clai Rice should have theplayers in shape for the playoffs, though...In graduate play, the Saudi Union Move¬ment have been very professional in itselimination of three successive opponents.The team is made up of players from theUniversity of Chicago Varsity Soccer team,playing, one supposes, for fun and practice.Forward David Weiss and fullback JohnMessersmith (another Fallers alum) havebeen impressive individually.The women’s leagues have been dominat¬ed by a new team, Scrubbing Bubbles. Re-gretably, this reporter has not seen the teamplay, but it edged the early favorite Nantes-Outre-Mar last week. In residence play, lastyear’s strong finisher Snell is back with avengeance, rallying behind forward AmySilverman, who is better than a lot ofplayers in the men’s leagues. Other con¬tenders are Hale, Breckinridge, LowerFlint, and Crown Rats.APRIL SPECIALSheboygan Bratwurston a home-bakedFrench RolLwithfresh fruit & aglass ofAugsburger(on tap)*2.9553^ St &667-2000 SOCIM RankingsGraduate Men1. Saudi Union Movement*2. Gertie’s3. Blue Star Vorwaerts4. Central-South America5. PenguinsUndergraduate Men1. Mildred2. Henderson A3. Compton4. Ark Royal5. Psi Upsilon6. Amalgamation7. Lower Rickert8. Vincent9. Bishop10.Upper RickertWomen1. Scrubbing Bubbles2. Breckinridge3. Snell4. Hale5. Lower Flint♦All-University No. 1SOCIMMenAmalgamation 3 Dinkleberries 2Compton 2 Thompson 1Achilles Heels 4 Med I 1Gertie’s 1 Blue Star Vorwaerts 0WomenHale 6 Upper Wallace 0Scrubbing Bubbles 5 Delta Sigma 1Lower Wallace 2 Bishop 1Dudley 1 Three’s A Crowd 0Sports CalendarBaseballApr. 16 — at Ripon CollegeSoftballApr. 15, 16 — at Cornell TournamentMen’s TennisApr. 16 — Lake Forst College, 10 a.m. BeloitCollege, 3 p.m., Ingleside CourtsApr. 18 - at Northeastern Illinois Univ., 3p.m.Women’s TrackApr. 15 — U of C Open Meet I, 4 p.m., StaggFieldMen’s TrackApr. 16 — at Monmouth College RelaysTA) SA® mCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Doily 1 1 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062<? Tie Blackstone 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 SALES427-430018—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983SportsWomen open outdoors by taking ChampionshipsBy Sue FortunatoAfter an undefeated indoor season, the1982-83 women’s track team opened its out¬door season by winning the Chicago AreaInter-collegiate Championships. All Divi¬sion I, II, III and junior colleges in the Chi¬cago area competed at the meet which washeld last Friday.The Maroons compiled 109 points to out-score Loyola University (105), Wheaton(56), University of Illinois-Chicago (39), Tri¬ton College (36), Chicago State University(35), College of DuPage (34), North CentralCollege (32), Concordia (21), Harper Col¬lege (15), North Park (14), DePaul (2), andElmhurst (0).Junior Helen Straus earned 32 of theteam’s points with two first place and twothird place finishes. With a first place scoreof 4425 points in the heptathalon (high jump,long jump, shot put, javelin, 100 m high hur¬dles, 200 m dash, and 800 m run), Straus not only set new school and personal records butalso qualified for the NCAA nationals by 265points. Straus also set new school and per¬sonal records in the javelin with a first placethrow of 124’ 4”, and was only six feet shortof qualifying for nationals in this event too.Her remaining 12 points came from thirdplace finishes in the discus and high jump.Senior co-captain Becky Redman provid¬ed the team with its only first place finish asshe won the 800 m run in a new school recordtime of 2:24.96. Freshman Bipasa Bose alsoset a new school record in the 1500 m run asshe placed third in a tough field with a timeof 4:53.4. Redman and Bose combined withAlison O’Neill and Natalie Williams toclinch the team title by placing second in thelast event of the meet, the 4 x 400 m relay.Another second place finish was turned inby Jennifer Maude in the 10,000 m run.Senior Nancy Flores provided the teamwith 12 points by placing third in the hep-Ruggers beat Northwestern 10-7By H. C. MaguireSunday afternoon, in the muck and mireof North Field, the University of ChicagoFootball Rugby Club’s A side came backfrom a 7-0 halftime deficit to beat Northwes¬tern’s powerful club 10-7 and advance to thefinals of the area All-University Mid-Ameri¬ca Qualifying Tournament.Chicago got off to a bad start, allowing atry and a penalty kick at the close of the firsthalf, leaving Northwestern with a 7-0 lead.The Chicago ruggers surged in the secondhalf though, quickly bringing the score to 7-6after two consecutive penalty kicks by fullback Scott Lucas. After moving the ballback to within Northwestern’s 22-yard line,the Chicago squad found scoring difficult.The north-siders’ defense was finally pene¬trated when wing forward Jeff Leinbergernailed NU’s wing as he tried to kick the ball.Chicago’s Sandy Cartwright scooped up theball and drove over the line for the try leav¬ing the final score at 10-7. At the close of thematch inside center Mike Troy declared,“Our team is tougher than woodpeckerlips.”The game was part of a qualifying tour¬nament similar to NCAA regional competi¬tion. The Chicago Club must now play Northern Illinois University to advance tothe regionals on Apr. 30 in St. Louis.Sunday’s game came in the wake of a Sat¬urday victory over Kankakee in the U of C’sfirst match of the season. Jean PaulMcCarthy scored the only try in that gamenear the end of the first half on a 30-year runafter a pass from outside center Stan Wa-towich. Another Lucas penalty kick, this onefrom 40 yards out, gave the club the sevenpoints it needed to defeat Kankakee 7-6.Other stellar efforts in Saturday’s gamewere put in by wing forward Mark Kellerand by Pete Layton and Dave Wright at sec¬ond row.The Club’s B side lost a heartbreaker Sat¬urday when the Chicago Griffins came backwith a penalty kick in the last three secondsof the game to take it out from under Chi¬cago 7-4.This year’s team is especially talentedand extraordinarily deep. There are nowenough players at practices to field threeChicago sides. Anyone still interested injoining may call Sandy Cartwright, head ofplayer personnel, at 753-2240.Chicago faces a very tough Fox ValleyClub tomorrow afternoon At Stagg Field.The first match begins at 1 p.m.5309 S. Blackstone • 947-0200OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PAN IS NOWAVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up“Chicago’s best pizza!" — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Times, January 1980 tathalon and the 100 m hurdles, while fresh¬man Gretchen Gates took fourth in the 100 mhurdles. Flores teamed up with IngridBuntschuh, Straus and Williams for a fourthplace finish in the 4 x 100 m relay. Besidesanchoring the second and fourth place 4 x400 m and 4 x 100 m relay teams, Williamsalso placed third in the 200 m dash. TheMaroons also got 10 points in the 400 m hurd¬les as sophomore Tracy Button and O’Neillplaced third and fourth respectively.The Maroons showed a lot of depth in thethree throwing events as they took nine ofthe 18 places and gained 41 team points.Sophomore Beth Lasky accumulated 11team points as she placed third in the jave¬lin and fourth in the discus and sixth in the shot put. Kathe Waters took fourth in thediscus and third in the shot put while Buttonand Diana Kaspic took fourth and fifth re¬spectively in the javelin.Head coach Linda Whitehead was verypleased with the impressive team results ofthe first outdoor meet attributing the victo¬ry to “outstanding individual performancesand the team’s depth in the throws, hurdleevents, heptathalon and relays.” Althoughthe team was weak in several areas due toinjuries which caused many U of Csprinters, jumpers and distance runners tomiss the meet, the Maroons hope to bestronger and healthier as the season pro¬gresses and expect additional fine team andindividual performances.Crew opens well at Notre DameFollowing a winter of workouts in BartlettGym and a month of practices on the water,the U of C Coed Crew Club travelled toNotre Dame Sunday to begin their springseason.For many newcomers to the team, thiswas their first regatta, and they were greet¬ed in South Bend by intermittent rain, hail,and gusting winds.Undaunted by the elements of their oppo¬nents from Notre Dame, Northwestern andthe Lincoln Park Boat Club, the U of CTIME$AVERSThe Communication ProfessionalsDocument Preparation, Manuscripts,Theses, Term Papers,Word Processing & IBM Selectrics"Your Deadline Is Our Timetable"470-0231 rowers competed in eight of 10 events held,and fared well in each.The highlights for Chicago came in themen’s and women’s lightweight four races,containing some of the team’s most experi¬enced rowers. The women left the opposi¬tion far back in their puddles — despite apoor start — and finished in front of second-place Notre Dame by six boat-lengths. Thelightweight men, stroking at a lower ca¬dence than planned, also trounced tne i\otreDame and Northwestern entries.Continued on page 21HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00a.m.W. Kenneth Williams. MinisterSusan Johnson. Baptist Campus MinisterCome. Worship. Study, ServeThe long-awaitedBowie album "LET'S DANCE"has finally meanderedits way into ourstock.Check theSLASH BIN-New titlesevery week inALL kinds of music! USSOONFOR THE NEWRELEASES FROMRCA, WARNER,ELECTRA-ATLANTIC,CBS, ANDCLASSICALFROMPOLYGRAMThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983—19G.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Ey«s 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.CONTINENTALBREAKFAST•Fresh-baked croissant•100% fresh-groundColumbian Coffee•Fresh-squeezedorange juice*2.00Now open at 6:30 am53^ St.& fyatyaeD667-2000RockefellerChapelHoly Communion10:00 & 11:00 a.m.Religious Educationfor Children11:00 a.m.Joseph Cardinal Bernardin,Archbishop of Chicago,will preach and celebrate mass.3:00 p.m.Joseph Cardinal Bernardinwill lecture on“Reconciliation” FarawaVfEfeTRAVEL •/AGENCYSOUTH SHORE BANK BLDG. • 19S0 E. 71st St. • 684-3030We deliver your airline and Amtrak ticketsat no extra cost (orders over 150.00)• LAS VEGAS Fr.„ *263.00• CRUISES 7daysCOMMODORE UNIS.... 860.00RHAPSODY 835.00CARNIVAL 860.00• JAMAICA 7 day.air and hotel From 339.00• BAHAMAS 7 day.air and hotel....... ....From 289.00marian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 APARTMENTSFOR RENT ISllllGRAFF &CHECK >!■!1617 E. 55th St.Large2Va, !4 & 6 rm. i."l°pts- ilk.*c/mmec/iateOccuyxmty \BU8-5566IDA NOYES HALL • 303-041212 E. 59th ST.ACCEPTING APPLICATIONSADVERTISING MANAGERA full-time position reporting to the editor. Salary is commis¬sion (% of sales). Duties include full responsibility for displayadvertising sales, including setting of prices & discounts. Willcall on new & existing accounts, pick up copy, design & proofads, and paste-up aa portion or issue. Sales and/or graphicarts experience helpful but not required.BUSINESS MANAGERA part-time position reporting to the editor. 10-12 hours perweek; paid by hour. Duties include: preparation of quarterlystatements, collections, maintenance or bank accounts, anddevelopment and implementation of various budgets. Someknowledge of accounting principles helpful, but not required.BOTH POSITIONSbegin summer 1983. Stop by our office on the third floor ofIda Noyes Hall, Rooms 303-04, beginning Wednesday,April 6 to fill out a preliminary application. No calls, please.CHICAGOMAROON GOLDCITY INNGivenby the MaroonOpen DailyFrom 11:30 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for lessA Gold Mine Of Good FoodStudent Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodJH’AN MOSKOWITZ HAS AWAY WITH WORDS:“Being Jewish has alwaysbeen very important to meand that’s why I believe inthe Jewish Messiah, Jesus.”Mr. Moskowitz will be speak¬ing at Hyde Park AllianceChurch on Sunday Feb. 20at 10 AM. The service willbe held in the Exeter Roomin the Hyde Park Hiltonwhich is located at 4900 S.Lake Shore Dr.FOR MORE INFO.CALL 752-046920—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983Sports Classified AdsCrewContinued from page 19The men’s heavy-four and varsity eightraces were minor disappointments. In each,the U of C entries finished behind the win¬ners by only one second after seven minutesof effort. The women’s varsity-eight alsofinished a close second in a well-rowedrace.All oarspeople in the novice competitionsare new to the club this year. Those rowersin the novice men’s heavy-eight and ligh¬tweight eight and the novice women’s eighttruly showed their potentials as tough com¬petitors for the spring season.April 23 will see the club back in SouthBend against the Notre Dame and MichiganState teams among others. In the mean¬time, the early morning sorties to LincolnPark Lagoon bring the team daily closer tothe April 30 Midwest Championships in Ma¬dison, Wisconsin. _ The University of Chicago Coed CrewClub is having a benefit auction on Sunday,Apr. 17, 1983, in Ida Noyes Hall (on thecampus of the U of C), 1212 East 59th Street,Chicago. Doors open at 3 p.m. for previewitems, with the auction beginning at 4 p.m.Titled “Auction-Plus,” this event willoffer a wide variety of items from area mer¬chants and the University community — in¬cluding electron-microscope photographsby Physics Professor Albert Crewe, originalartwork, jewelry, wine and records, as wellas services for hair design, landscape gar¬dening, floral arranging and more.Also featured are entertainment spots,food, and faculty emcees. Tickets are $5.00for adults, $2.50 for students and seniors,and children free. Tickets are available atthe door, or by calling Sue Fisher at477-5652.The proceeds of Auction-Plus go directlyfor purchase of equipment for the Club,which has doubled in size in just a year. U ofC is one of only two schools in Illinois with arowing program, and three-fourths of theClub’s budget comes from fundraising ac¬tivities.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. Itis published twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Editorial and business officesare located on the 3rd floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. Phone753-3263.Darrell WuDunnEditorAnna FeldmanManaging EditorJeffrey TaylorNews EditorCliff GrammichNews Editor Margo HablutzelFeatures EditorDavid BrooksViewpoints EditorFrank LubySports EditorAra JelalianPhotography Editor Nadine McGannGrey City Journal EditorPaul O’DonnellChicago Literary ReviewEditorWilliam RauchContributing EditorSteve ShandorCopy Editor Wally DabrowskiProduction ManagerSteve BrittBusiness ManagerJay McKenzieAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerAssociate Editor: Kahane CornStaff: Edward Achuck, Zlatko Batistich, Mark Bauer, Dan Breslau, Pumima Dubey,Maeve Dwyer, Tom Elden, Michael Elliott, Pat Finegan, Paul Flood, Sue Fortunato,Lisa Frusztajer, Caren Gauvreau, Eric Goodheart, Elisse Gottlieb, Joe Holtz, KeithHorvath, Jim Jozefowicz, Sondra Krueger, Linda Lee, Kathleen Lindenberger, JaneLook, Nick Lynn, Jack Ponomarev, Amy Richmond, Craig Rosenbaum, YousufSayeed, Koyin Shih, Suzanne Sloan. Nick Varsam, John Vispoel, Andy Wrobel, KittieWyneCalendarSUNDAYOriental Institute Films: Megiddo: City of Destrcu-tion 2 p.m. Musuem Aud. FreeMusic Dept.: Early Music Series — “The HillardEnsemble” Vocal Music from the 12th to early 19thcenturies 8 p.m. Mandel. Tickets call 962-8068 or962-7300 $9 $5 w. UCSID available 7 p.m.LSF: Casablanca 8:30 p.m. Law Sch. Aud. $2Doc: Circle of Deceit 8 p.m. Cobb $2International Folkdancing: General level, 8 p.m.1NH. Teaching 8-10 p.m.; request dancing 10 p.m.Calvert House: All Masses Canceled! Mass at 11a.m. at Rockefeilr Chapel with Cardinal BernadineCOED CREW BENEFIT AUCTION: 3 p m. pre¬view, 4 p.m. auction INH Clositer Club.Hillel: Lox and Bagel Brunch 11 a m. $1.75/sand-wich. Yom Yazikaron, In Memorium for Those WhoFell Defending Israel, 1 p.m.; Yom Ha'atamaut-Israeli Indpendence Day Celebrations: Carnival,Singing, Dancing, Israeli Dinner, Film Sallah INH5:30 p.m. $2.50T’ai Chi Classes: with Master Wu 3-5 p.m. INHCloister ClubRockefeller Chapel: University Religious Service &Ecumenical Holy Communion 9 a m. this week only,Bernard O. Brown presiding; Catholic Mass withCardinal Josef Bernadine 11 a m.Brent House: Episcopal Eucharist and Supper 5:30p.m.MONDAYDOC: Thriller Women 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50Areobic Dance: with Lily Li $20/8 classes $35/16 5:15p.m. INH Call 753-2249 for info.Calvert House: Program for Commuters 3:15 p.m.;Mass 4 p.m.; Sherry Hour and presention by Fr.John Hurley on “Church Authority and IndividualConscience”International Folkdancing: Beg. — Int. levels 8 p.mINH. Teaching 8-10 p.m.; Request Dancing 10 p.mHillel: Yom Ha'aizmaut Celebration on the Quads,dancing, singing. ..12 noon; Students for Israel meetsHutch Commons 6:30 p.m.; Israeli Folk Dancing,Blue Gargoyle, 5655 University. $1Advanced Genetics: Jack Szostak, Harvard Med.Cen., on “Teleomere Structure and Functionk” 4p.m. EBC 106Comm. On Virology Herpes Series: Niza Frenkel on“The Genetics of Herpes Simplex Virus DNA Repli¬cation: Viral Enzymes.” 1 p.m. CLSC 1117U.C. Judo Club: Meets for practice 6 p.m. BartlettGym FRIDAYSAO. Ticket Deadline: Twyla Tharp Dance Founda¬tion $6-$12 Come to Rm 210 INHConcrete Gothic Theater: The Real Inspector Houndby Tom Stoppard directed by Georffrey Potter 8p.m. Reynold’s Club 3rd fl. Theatre. Tickets $2.50 &$3 at doorDOC. Conan the Barbarian 7, 9, & 11 p.m. Cobb $2Minerology-Petrology Seminar: Lawrence Gross-man on “Some Recent Studies of the Allende Mete¬orite" 3 p.m. Hinds 101U.C. Asian Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30 p.m.Agustana Lutheran Church, 55th & WoodlawnkInter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Meeting 7:30p.m. INH Library: “Daniel I”HILLEL: Orthodox Sabbath Services 5:45 p.m.;Adat Shalom Sabbath Dinner 6:30 p.m.; Lecture:Prof. David Patterson on “Modern Hebrew Litera¬ture Goes on Aliyah” 8:30 p.m.Philosophy Dept.: Adolf Grunbaum, U. of Pitt., on“Logical Foundations of Psychoanalytic Theory” 4p.m. Harper 103Comm, on Social Thought Eva Brann Lectures: E.B.on “Against Time” 4 p.m. Harper 130Chicago Law Foun.: Adrian DeWind on “Reconcil¬ing Interests and Careers” 12:30 p.m. Seminar RmD, Law Sch.Blue Gargoyle: Clay Midgets 9 p.m. $1Calvert House: Program for College students: Fr.John Hurley on “The Individual Vis-a-Vis theChurch” followed by Supper 5:30 p.m.SATURDAYConcrete Gothic Theatre: The Real Inspector Houndby Tom Stoppard, dir. by Geoffrey Potter, 8 p.m.Reynolds Club 3rd fl. Theatre. Tickets $2.50 & $3 atdoorArmenian Students Asso.: Armenian Party w/au-thentic Armenian band and refreshments. 9 p.m.-la.m. I-House $1 all welcome Call 753-2274 for infoLSF: Casablanca 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb $2DOC: The Long Good Friday 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb$2Calvert House: Sacrament of Reconciliation 4:30p.m.; Mass, 5 p.m.Men’s Volleyball: U.C. Tournament 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.Field House. FreeHillel: Orthodox Sabbath Services 9:15 a.m.; Up¬stairs Minyan Sabbath Services 9:30 a.m.Christian Perspectives: Rev. Bassam Madany on“From Confrontation to Mutual Understanding”7:30 p.m. H.P Christian Reformed Church, 6144 S.Cornell SPACE6100 S. Dorchester, 2 BR apts for rent, 1 & 2bath, cptd., stove & refrig., all electric, security buzzer, 1 yr. lease, 1 mo. sec dept., no pets,$435 $450. CALL Sharon at 369 8484 for appt. &SPECIAL rent'rebate offer good till 4/19/83. Fully furnished house f. rent. 4-5 bdrms Aug. 83thru Aug. 84. Close to campus, Billings. Idealfor visiting prof. Call 947-0706Student Government publishes a weekly list ofavailable housing. Call 753-3273 or come to IdaNoyes 306 MF 12-5, TTh 3-5.Hyde Park Studio Apts 245.00 clean quietbuilding newly decorated -F carpeted stove -Frefrig laundry facilities 24 hour manager 5140S. Woodlawn 493-6250 Summer sublet: 3 bedroom apartment nearcampus, in married student housing Availablefor summer quarter. U.C. students only. Call324 2280.55th & INGLESIDE1 bedroom condo in lovely security courtyardbuilding. New kitchen, bath. Full carpetingover beautiful oak floors - take your pick!Great association & amenities. Low, lowassessment! $43,000. Call 241-5198Beverly Shores, Ind. 3 nice homes. $45,000,$67,500 and $70,000. 45 minutes from U of C.Call Renard at Callahan Realty. 219-926 42982BR LR Dr. 2 blks from Quad $550 (Utils-i-Park). Negotiable. 962-7290/324 4985. Large 3 br. 2 bath condo for sale by owner.Choice E. H. Park location. Lovely country kitchen, formal dr and sunny Ir. $69,900 for quicksale last unit in bldg, sold for much more 353-3386.Freshly decorated one bdrm. avail now at 52nd-F Woodlawn. $295. student discount avail. 684-5030 bet. 8:30am or eves. 493-2329.Student Govt, publishes a list of available hous¬ing. To advertise (free) call 753-3273 or come toIda Noyes 306 MF 12-5, TTh 3-5.3 bedroom condominiums for sale 55th streetand Everett. Call 357-7926 evenings 979-6091days.Studios, 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 Regents Park one bedroom apt. May 1 26th fl.View of Lake -F Downtown 492.00 947-0453Townhouse 4br 2V2 c/air enclosed yard parkingNO PETS Rent July July 850 mo. eve. 493-0543.Furnished 1 bedroom apartment 955-7083Metropolitan!—- Community Churchof the Resurrection5638 So. Woodlawn 579-1299Outreach to the Gay CommunityWorship - Sunday 3 pmJoin Us Now!RENT-A-CAR1608 E. 53rd StreetSI4.50 per dcy 200 free MilesBetween IC Trock«, - . w A AA^and Cornell 667*2800ELEGANT COLONIALAT 49TH & KIMBARKThis handsome home is beautifully situated ona triple lot. The mahogany french doors thatlead to the living room, dining room and sunroom add to its attractiveness The spacious L-shaped country kitchen is extended by a cozybreakfast room, and all the rooms are light andbright. A perfect home for a large family but notso large as to be unmanageable. The two-carbrick garage has an electric door opener and afour-room apartment above. $385,000.Mrs. Ridlon.BRAND NEW LISTING"E" trilevel townhouse. Large backyard and GARAGE. Tastefully simpleand immaculate ... with all the efficient advantages. Centrally air-conditioned. Margo Bouer.TWO ON CAMPUSVISTA HOMES. Rarely available one bedroom apartment in elegantcooperative hirise. Excellent security. Views of Jackson Park and Museumof Science and Industry. Immediate possession. GARAGE SPACEINCLUDED. $38,000. Eleanor Coe.ON THE MIDWAY. Charming two bedroom coop apartment in superbcondition. Treetop views of gardens and park. Lots of closets and storage.Heated garage space included. Low assessments. $49,500. Kay WertzKennedy, Ryan, Monigal & Associates667-6666 • 5508 S Lake Par* AveThe Chicago Maroon—Fridav, April 15, 1983—21Classified Ads3 Bedroom - Totally renovated. All new; kit¬chen, bath, etc., plmg. oak doors, windows,tloors, everything. Vicinity Co-op ShoppingCenter. $650 incl. heat 5/1 or before. Adults. NoPets. Call: 525-3373.SUMMER SUBLET S160/month turnished. 1block from 1C close to bus H6 view of Lake hugeliving-dining rooms Call 947 0359 before 10 amafter 11pm.Roommate wanted to share LARGE 2 bdrmapt 5 rms, front + back porch, backyard. $220June 1st, Janice W. 962 6647 or 643-7528.Furnished room w/kitchen priv. 955-7083.1 Bedroom vicinity Co-op Shopping Centerlarge + airy. Sunporch. $425. 6/1 Adults NoPets 764 2493 or 525-3373Studio Apartments $245 HILD REALTYGROUP 955-1200SPACE WANTEDPhD Cand seeks to house-sit for reduced rent.Begin Sept. 1. J. Ikenberry, Brookings Inst.1775 Mass. Ave. Washington, D.C. (202) 797-6439/462-0164.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.BEVERLY SHORES HISTORIC DISTRICTLOUIS SULLIVAN DESIGNED CLASSICCOLONIAL MANSION. Designated LandmarkStatus, Tribune Home of the Week 18 room10,000 sq ft. Ball Room Billiard Room SodaFountain, Fireplaces 6 br 3'/2 bath Reduced$350,000. Brokers Participation Invited. Callowner 239-4642."Teargas" mace aerosal. Send for freecatalogue. Good protection against muggersand assaults. Write to: Smith, P.O. Box 17345,Chicago, IL 60617.Attention to All of Our HydePark Friends & Customers . . .We Are Happy to ReportThat We Are Now In Our93rd Year atWRIGHT LAUNDRYAND CLEANERSand we are continuing tooffer you the same finequality.FULL SERVICELAUNDRY &DRY CLEANINGCourtesy Pick-Up &Delivery ServiceTry Our Summer Box StorageOpen Mon-Sat 7 am to 5:30 pm1315 E. 57th • MI3-2073 JPRESSES up to 2SXS8...Fast prlat to 22x28The Southside s largest andmost tomplete print shppOffset I letterpressLAYOUT & ARTPM0T0 COMPOSITION•wr KM typtstyMs forbrochures, books, ad books*“ — printing needstinning_ UNION7-3142 LABEL5832 So. Green VINTAGE CLOTHING SALE April 16 + 1712nocn-6pm. Shower yourselt with spring sav¬ings for sunny days ahead. HEAVEN at 6981 N.Sheridan for monthly sales of men's andwomen's vintage clothing and accessories.Two original Acoustic Research speakers ask¬ing $65 for both Call Bob at 947-0558.Tennis Racquets-Davis Imperial (Mans) andDavis Supreme (Womans) $30 each or $50 bothCall 624-5605 after 6pmTDK SA90 TAPES 10 for $29.90FUJI FRII TAPES 10 for $29.90Special Rebate!SONY UCXS90 TAPES 10 for $34.90MODEL CAMERA 1342 E. 55fh St. 493-6700YARD SALE MULTI-FAMILY, Sat. April 16,10-2, SE corner 57th + Kimbark apt. 52 washer,kids clothes, turn, household items, toys, suit¬case. etc.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962 8859.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.Earn $500 or more each school year. FlexibleHours. Monthly payment for placing posters oncampus. Bonus based on results. Prizes awarded as well. 800-526 0883.Sitter wanted for ten-year old. Occasionalevenings, near Blackstone Hall. 955-0159.Dealer's needed to run casino tables at IHCMonte-Carlo night, April 29. For details call753 2233 x331; leave name & phone i.Job Available Now: someone needed to type300 pages of a manuscript into computer filesusing either of the UofC's DEC or Amdahlsystems. Call collect, eves., 219-465-1346. Askfor Rebecca. WANTEDROOMMATE male or female, grad studentpref, to live with female med student in 2 br 3rdfl apt starting in June or Sept. Newlyrenovated, wooden fls security entrance 2 por¬ches build. Laundry facil. rent $230/mo heat &hot water inc. Call Jan evenings after 5pm. 667-7669SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.JAMES BONE, EDITOR Typist, 363-0522.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.Typing. Term papers theses, etc. IBM Correc¬ting Selectric. All projects welcome. 791-1674.Discount Moving and Hauling ReasonableRates and Free Estimates Seven Days a WeekDay and Evening References Available. CallTom 8-10am 6 to 10pm at 375-6247.General and legal typing services. Promptpick up and delivery. Contact Victoria Gordon752-1983.DELI TRAYS + Cheese + cracker, fresh fruit,fresh vegetable + dip, assorted meats, and an¬tipasto trays. Hyde Park Cafes 667-3000.Child care avail, grat area for play. Ex¬teacher + mother. 493-8195.SCENESUC Coed Crew's BENEFIT-AUCTION is thisSunday at 4pm in Ida Noyes. Great bargainsand good food will be there. Why don't YOU,too?Was/oZ/e yi/d/scm&ea/ (^1/a/e493-0666CALL ANYTIMEFEATURE OF THE WEEKCalled ‘ Professor's house. ’ ’By Mann, MacNeille architects in 1903. Wonderfulbrick 3-story residence on nostalgic GreenwoodAvenue. Three-car brick garage. Big yard. 2 workingfireplaces. Leaded <& stained glass windows, bookcases.Six bedrooms. Spacious gracious home. $187,500.SMALL DOLL HOUSE, brick. Columbian Exposi¬tion period. 7 rooms, new kit. & bath, nice sun deck,excellent systems. Near 55th <£ Ridgewood Court.$94,000flexible.HOUSE WITH INCOMEFirst floor has 4 rooms w/fireplace. SECOND FLOOR is duplexed to 3rd. Near 55th. $114,000.Call Ken.HYDE PARK’S CORNELL VILLAGE-52ndSees the lake and city. High floor. 3 bedroom-spacious. Includes inside garage. $105,000.CAMPUS FAVORITE 58th and BLACKSTONEHistoric residence pre-dates usual Victorians. We put it at about 1884. Wonderfully updatedsystems. Wonderfully traditional library has real fireplace. 10 rooms in all. Asking $250,000.JUST LISTED NEAR 57th & BLACKSTONE5 rooms. Walnut trim (with mantle). Oak floors, sunny study, large formal D. R., new kitchen.HANDYMAN SPECIAL (CONDO)On Hyde Park Blvd. near 54th - this well located, big 7 room apt. need you to rejuvenate Only$58,500. Call Mane. * 7REHABBERS TAKE NOTEAuAr in 1980. Architext Sprague. This wonderful brick, 5000 sq. ft. residence in Kenwood callsout to you for restoration. 11 rooms. Electrical and heating are less than 10 years old. Yourchoice of many functioning fireplaces. Discover original woodwork under paint. Antique leadedwindows. Low price of only $128,000. We even have a separate 2 car brick garage. Call Ken.WHY NOT LOOK AT THE LAKE SINCE IT’S THERE?Gorgeous views from high floor at 56th <£ Everett (across from Museum). 6 lovely rooms$105,000.22—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983 Why pay for war? Learn abouf war taxresistance. 8 pm Sunday, April 17; 5615 S.Woodlawn.LOST AND FOUNDEarring Lost Friday April 8th Black EnameledDangle on Woodlawn Between 57th and 58thLiberal Reward 538-2543GREEN Backpack was taken from U of CBookstore 4/12. PLEASE return notes or call947-8290, Sven No Questions Asked.Lost ladies' facewatch, broken black strap,with great affectionate value, two weeks agobetween 59th & 57th str. 667-7250.PERSONALSTrixie and Bunny, Zsa Zsa and Jackie-0 arecoming in this Wed. Can we get Jane to stop-LSimon I'll be watching your every movetonight darling.Hey Eka Welcome to the Big City! Havin'some fun?Happy Birthday to M of the M and B DetectiveAgency. 24 years of fine operative tradition.V. Boyer - Can't reach you. Want to see you.Call soon! M.S. at N.U. 492 0713Salmon Queen: I'll be a fish out of water whenyou leave, but at least there'll be room in thefreezer. Lots of H's and K's. BananaHERPES RESEARCHUsing interferon for recurrent genital herpes.For males over 18. Howard Brown MemorialClinic, 2676 N. Halsted, 871-5777. Conductingconfidential sexually transmitted diseasetesting and treatment.WE NEED YOUImmigration, Hospitals. Homes and centersfor senior citizens. Emergency aid for Jewishcommunities around the world. In Israel, theUS, and elsewhere, the UJA 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.TORAHIS ALIVE AND WELLIN ISRAEL5234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-02004 *4Classified AdsPHOTOGRAPHY STUDIOPortraits, Weddings, and Special Events a7enow being booked by Hyde Park's newest por¬trait studio. Call and speak with Ron Milewskiat The Better Image.1344 E. 55th St. 643 6262REDLIGHTPRODUCTIONSIs available to make Your next party a SuccessDJ-ing, lights, other services available. Call241 6438 for info and rates.UN IT TRAYS!Tired of all your game pieces falling out oftheir boxes? Try CLOSE SIMULATIONS UnitTrays. Hold them upside down and nothingfalls out! 3 for $6.65, plus $1 postage. (III.residents ad 40c tax) to CLOSE SIMULA¬TIONS P.O. Box 2246, Dept P. Northbrook, II.60062.UNITED JEWISHAPPEALThe U of Chicago United Jewish Ap¬peal/Federation Campaign '83 is April 10-25.Volunteer, pledge, contribute. Help others.Contact David at 493-7651.COMEONE! COME ALL!This Saturday, in Ida Noyes Hall, an all dayMediaeval Event will be held. The War of theRoses will be re-enacted in the Gym, and amany-dish feast will be held in the CloisterClub that night. Everyone is invited to watchand to join in the contests; to be entertained byjesters and to haggle with the merchants.PARTY!PARTY!PARTY!Armenian Dance Saturday April 16th at9:00pm at I House featuring live Armenianmusic and complimentary ArmenianRefreshments. $1 UCID.BY GEORGELower Rickert has got it! You can catch it onApril 15 and 16 in the Ida Noyes Theatre whenG. Wally Productions presents: "A FunnyThing Happened To My Fair Lady" doors openat 7pm and curtain goes up at 7:30pm $1 dona¬tion.GEE WALLYGosh Beaver! You should go the Seventh An¬nual Lower Rickert Play: "A Funny ThingHappened To My Fair Lady" April 15 and 16 inIda Noyes. Doors open at 7pm and curtain goesupat7:30pm. It's only a dollar!FOR A GOOD TIMECome to the All-University Armenian Party onSaturday April 16th at 9:00pm at 1-Housefeaturing live Armenian music and com¬plimentary Armenian refreshments. $1 UCID.SAT. PUB CONCERTFreddie Haque + Shirley Krebbe (jazz guitar+ vocal). Sat, April 16, 8-10 p.m. Membershipsat door. 21 + over.59TH & BLACKSTONESummer sublet available June 10. Completelyand beautifully furnished, sunny 2V? room withbalcony & porch. Subsidized at $325. 241-5203.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 A fyatyieV667-2000 HOTLINEMake the informed decision; call the hotline.753-1777 from 7 pm 7amAUDITIONSCome Audition for Good Person of Setzuandirected by Gerald Mast and Produced by Con¬crete Gothic Theater. The auditions will beheld on April 16, and 17 from 1-4 pm at theThird Floor Reynolds Club Theater.VOLUNTEERNow that you've settled down into the newquarter, don't forget The Student VolunteerBureau. There are many volunteer optionsavailable. Tutoring, Counseling, Advocacy arejust some areas. Open up New Horizons,Discover New Talents, Volunteer!AUCTION-PLUS!!is YOUR place for fun and bargains thisweekend. Unique electr-microscope photos,art, records and much more await. Good foodfor almost nothing, too! It happens Sunday at4pm in Ida Noyes (Preview of items begins at3). Tickets available now or at the door. Jointhe fun! Sponsored by UC Coed Crew.ATTN: GAMBLERSDealers are needed for IHC's Monte Carlo NiteApr. 29. Call Paul Demopoulos 753 2233 orCraig Johnson 753-8342 if interested.HELLOFor Responsibility, action, organizationand representation Please vote forWalsh, Wong, Spoerl, and GomezGAY DANCEGALA presents a disco/benefit for HowardBrown Memorial Clinic on Sat. April 23rd from9-lam. at the International House East LoungeA $5 donation is requested. Plenty ofrefreshments and special guest NorthwesternU. GALA Also, the Group now meets Tuesdaysat 9:00pm at 5446 good company.HIJoe Walsh, Jean Spoerl, Timmy Wongand Chris Gomez are running ascandidates. Please consider us.SAT. PUB CONCERTFreddie Haque + Shirley Krebbe (jazz guitar+ vocal). Sat, April 16, 8 10p.m. Membershipsat door. 21 + over.LIVE DANCE MUSICCLAY MIDGETS and THE RHYTHM DATESbenefit for The Blue Gargoyle (57th andUniversity). Tonight at 10:00. No alcoholSERVED.AVfy.> * -j.* VINTAGE SALEMEN’S & WOMEN’S VINTAGE CL OTHINGAND ACCESSORIES12:00-6:006981 N. SHERIDAN RD„ CHGO. ATTENTION CYCLISTSOrganizational meeting of the bike club!Anyone interested in riding should attend. IdaNoyes Library Mon. 4/18 8pm.POLARITY BALANCINGTo release blocked energy and to achieve yourhealthful, creative potential. P/2 hr. massageNon sexual. For information or appointmentcall Bob Rueter at 324-7530.COMMUTING STUDENTSCome to the 50's Dance—Friday April 15, 7pmIda Noyes Cloister Club.CHEERLEADINGTRYOUTSCLINICS and TRYOUTS for 1983 84 U of Csquad. Mon. 6:30 p.m., Tues 4:00 p.m., Mult.Purp. room, Field House. For more info callLaurel, 947-0138.NEED EXTRACASH?Subjects are needed for a questionnaire-typeexperiment in the Graduate School ofBusiness. PAYMENT IS $5.00 AN HOUR ANDWILL BE PAID IN CASH. The experiment willlast about two hours. Call 962-7037.RUMMAGE SALE3-person sale-tons of womens clothes, 50's +60's vintage, sports goods, kitchen stuff, books,records, misc. 1426 E. 54th street 11am to 3pm.ELEGANT APARTMENTSpacious livingroom for your grand piano,books everything! Beautiful coop two bedroomtwo bath apartment located in fine secure MiesVan Der Rohe promentary building. Newly in¬stalled Levelor Blinds rehabilitated kitchenfreshly painted for your move in readiness.Priced below market at 45,000. To close anestate for appointment please call CharlotteVikstrom 493-0666.REAL INSPECTOR HOUNDCome See The Real Inspector Hound directedby Geoff Potter and presented by ConcreteGothic Theater. The play will be performed atthe third floor Reynolds Club Theater on Fri.,April 15, Sat. 16, Thu. 21, Fri 22, Sat. 23 at 8pmAUCTIONMonday, April 187:00 p.m.PREVIEW OPEN NOWHours Tuesday - Saturday, 10 a m - 5 p mCiaes Oideoberg OcagoOld Master,19th and 20th CenturyPrints and DrawingsWorks by Dine. Chagall Mucha,Cheret Vasarely Oldenberg Degas RenoirPicasso Goya, Lautrec Caider viamimckand many othersSunday, April 17, 1 00 p mEnglish American, and Continental Furnitureand Decorations, Silver Porcelain, OrientalWorks of Art, Paintings, and RugsCATALOGUE $5.00SUBSCRIPTIONS $25.00LESLIE HINDMANAUCTIONEERS225 WEST OHIO STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60610(312) 670-0010 or dial AUCTIONJune 4,5,6. and 7, 1983Fine Books Including tne entire stock of JStephan Lawrence Chicago Illinois Over10 000 volumes Catalogue $10 00 postpaid II %CLASSICAL CHARM PERVADESthis converted hi-rise building. Highceilings, large bay windows, cedarclosets and spacious room designsmake these two and three bedroomunits especially attractive. 0% or lowinterest financing arrangements areavailable. Price includes newly sand¬ed hardwood floors and as is ap¬pliances. 2 bedroom/2 bath $60 s, 3bedroom/3 bath $80’s.LOVELY, LARGE 1 BEDROOMnear campus, shopping, and park.The designer decor, modem kitchen,and sun porch make this unit very at¬tractive. $50’s.SPACIOUS STUDIO - two largerooms in this walk to campusbuilding are priced right for thesingle home buyer. Large closets,oak floors, lots of sunlight, and ex¬cellent campus location make this agood buy. Low $30’s.PRICE REDUCED - this price can’tbe beat for a 1 bedroom at the Hamp¬ton House. Excellent securitybuilding, newly decorated, reads formove-in. $30’s.LOCATION - LOCATION -LOCATION - in the golden circle,this 2 bedroom and 2 studies condo isan ideal campus home. This unit has alovely yard, modem kitchen, andsuper space for studv. Price reduced- $60’s.UNIVERSITY PARK SPECIAL -lovely color coordinated levolorblinds, carpeting, and walls make this1 bedroom unit delightful. Indoorparking space is included in the price!Excellent security, swimming pooland exercise room. Mid S40’s.SPOTLESS, SECURE, STYLEthis 1 bedroom beauty in the Hamp- ’ton House has all three. Completelyremodeled - yet spacious rooms withhigh ceilings. Custom kitchen.Wonderful lobby and common areasParking available at the door and 24hour security . Take a look. $57,500LIGHT, BRIGHT AND CHEERY!Spacious 2 bedroom. 2 bath condowith lovely hardwood floors, balconyand Levolor blinds U of C campusbus stops at the comer and shopping,recreation and transportation isequally convenient. Priced right inthe low S60's.TIRED OF FINDING ROOM¬MATES.1 Start the new term in yourown studio apartment. Air-conditioned. carpeted and with anoff-street parking lot - yours forunder S30.000.THREE BEDROOM on bus line withlots of sunlight Modem kitchen, in¬door and outdoor sunporches. In mintcondition Asking onl> $59,500GREYSTONE - 2 flat. All newsystems. Ellis Avenue. 2 car garage.$135,000.JUST RELISTED WITH A PRICEREDUCTION to $67,900. Let's takea look. 56th and Kimbark. Woodbur¬ning fireplace, leaded glass. 2bedrooms and garage.GRAD STUDENT PARADISE!56th and Dorchester. 2 bedroom con¬dominium. large back yard. Rightwhere you want to be. $69,000.TAX SHELTERS? You bet Thecongress has designed the InternalRevenue Code to encourage invest¬ment in housing. And we have ex¬cellent opportunities with as little asno money down. Ask about our in¬vestor condos.HILD REALTY1365 E. 53rd St.955-1200The Chicago Maroon—Friday, April 15, 1983—23i mimu 11hiThe 6th Annual Spring DanceAn Evening of Dancing WithThe Louie Bellson OrchestraIDA NOYES HALLMAY 10, 1983 • 9 PM- Refreshments Served -UC Students $9 per person2 tickets per UCIDAlumni, faculty, staff $16/personTICKETS AT REYNOLDS CLUBTICKET CENTER • 962-7300Sponsored byTHE STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE Informational MeetingsAboutTHE HUMAN BIOLOGY MAJORA New Offering in the Bio SciCollegiate Divisionwill be held onTuesday, April 19,1:00 - 2:00 Harper 284Wednesday, April 27, 4:00 - 5:30 Harper 284The new Human Biology concentration in the Collegeis designed for students with a wide range of interestsand a particular interest in the biology of human be¬ings. This undergraduate program will focus on thedevelopment and function of the human organism, aswell as the nature of environments. All students in¬trigued by this subject matter—regardless of theirfield of interest—are encouraged to attend.Applications AvailableBeginning April 20 inHarper 587, East TowerThe latest news in hair comes from the HAIR PERFORMERS. News inPerms — innovative conditioning waves that improve the look, textureand feel of your hair. News in cuts — uncomplicated shapes thatmove easily from casual to professional to nighttime dramatic Takeadvantage of our great introductory offer and make your own news!PERMS NOW 50% OFF ORCOMPLETE SHAPING AND STYLING NOW $5.00 OFFThe OFFERS GOOD FOR FIRST TIME CLIENTS ONLY