Features —U of C murderers Striking OutOedipus WrecksCENTERSPREAD—1 page fiveThe Chicago MaroonVolume 92, No. 53 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon ~ May 10, 1983790 accept offers of admissionto the College class of 1987By Anna FeldmanThe number of prospectivefreshmen accepting offfers of ad¬mission from the College this yearis up four percent over last year’sfigures.Out of 4339 who applied this year,2032 were offered admission and790 accepted. Last year’s figuresshowed 4600 applications, 2121offers of admission, and 737 accep¬tances. Whereas both the numberapplying and the number offeredadmission were down, the numberof students accepting admissionwent up 7.2 percent.According to Dan Hall, dean ofCollege admissions, Scholastic Ap¬titude Test (SAT) scores are up ap¬proximately five points in the ver¬bal section and ten points in themathematics section of the exam,above last year’s average of 612verbal and 641 math.The percentage of women ac¬cepting admission is down to 37percent from last year’s figure of40 percent, despite hopes of the Of¬fice of College Admissions to main¬tain the number at or above the 40percent mark. The total number ofwomen, however, is approximate¬ly the same as last year’s number.Hall attributed the decline, in part,to the acceptance of women to Co¬lumbia’s previously all-male col¬lege.Twenty-two blocks and twenty-two hispanics have accepted ad¬ mission, the number of blacksdown two from last year and thenumber of hispanics by two.Until more complete statisticsare compiled, specific informationon financial aid allotments andgeographical distribution are una¬vailable. Hall did say, however,that financial aid to incomingfreshmen has increased to meetrising tuition costs.Hall said that he is very excitedabout the new class. Students wererecruited from some top highschools, he said, and seem to besome of the most active studentsthe campus may have seen. Hallattributes the high recruitmentsuccess to students, faculty andalumni.“It’s exciting,” he said. “I’vehad real support from students on campus this year.” Also, he said,“The faculty was very respon¬sive,” some writing letters fromtheir departments to interestedstudents who had visited. Such fol¬low-up is a new technique of re¬cruitment, he said.Some professors gave modelclasses so that prospectives couldwatch classes in progress, thenspoke to students and answeredquestion afterwards. The AlumniSchools Committee interviewedsome 1500 prospectives this year,up from about 1400 last year.Hall said that less structuredApril weekends allowed prospecti¬ve students and their parents to“wander around the campus”more, enabling them “to get asense of the richness of the Univer¬sity with all its resources.” COURTESY OF THE DUSABLE MUSEUMDuSable Museum founder Margaret Founder explainsartwork to interested youths. See story in centers-pread.Smeal criticizes low gov’t interest in womenBy Abby ScherEleanor Smeal, former presi¬dent of the National Organizationfor Women, applauded women’s in¬creased participation in politicsand condemned low interest inwomen’s issues in the legisla¬tures.In a talk last Thursday spon¬sored by the Women’s Union,Smeal said that the gender-basedvoting differences, or the “gender gap,” is a sign of women’s moreactive opposition to economic dis¬crimination, violence on thestreets and in the home, and theirsupport for peace and social ser¬vices. The gender difference iscaused by social training, she said,and by women’s greater victimiza¬tion in certain of those areas.The “gender gap,” according toSmeal, has appeared in 75 politicalraces in which women’s concernsJaroslav Pelikan: keeping thefaith in general educationThe following Maroon interviewwith Jaroslav Pelikan was con¬ducted last Friday. Pelikan, theSterling Professor of History atYale, delivered the second part ofhis three-part 1983 Jefferson Lec¬ture in the Humanities yesterdayat the Law School. The lectureshipInterviewis the highest honor conferred bythe federal government for out¬standing achievement in the hu¬manities. Pelikan is an interna¬tional authority on Christianity.The interview was conducted byDavid Brooks.Maroon: Reading about you I’vegotten the impression that you’vegrown somewhat dissatisfied withan educational system that hasturned its back on Humanistic tra¬ditions, especially in teaching.Pelikan: I think that’s true.Maroon: One of our Chicago pro¬fessors, Allan Bloom, wrote an ar¬ticle in the National Review inwhich he said that scholars in thesocial sciences are relying toomuch on what he called “the ephe¬mera of the past fifty years.” Doyou agree with him?Pelikan: Very much. I’ve writtenmy share of monographs — some of them very picky and technical.None of us could function withoutthose things. I came early to theconviction that I would not be ableto pursue my own historical voca¬tion without taking a chunk of thehuman experience with somemovement to it. So often people gointo a history course and get thelatest poop on this or that, and thenyou say to them, “Have you everread The Decline and Fall of theRoman Empire?” And theyhaven’t! I’ve had graduate stu¬dents in medieval history whohaven’t read Gibbon.Maroon: Do you find a differencebetween the students graduatingnow and your generation, not onlyin what they’ve read but in whatJaroslav Pelikan they’re producing?Pelikan: One difference clearly isa rapid increase in mathematicalskills. Some of what my studentsdo for me -- even freshman — isquite spectacular, not only in theway they calculate conclusions butin the way they phrase their ques¬tions. It leaves me in the dust.We’ve also paid for that. There’sbeen a loss in the easy use of otherlanguages. That’s always been aproblem in America. You becamean American by forgetting the lan¬guage of your parents. I remindstudents at Yale that when Yalewas founded Latin and Greek werenot required for graduation — theywere required for admission. In afield like mine, where you have tostudy documents in their originallanguage, it’s extremely difficultfor students to learn languages intheir twenties. I find the neglect oflanguages at the secondary andcollege level profoundly distress¬ing.Maroon: You got your PhD whenyou were 22, which means youmust have had a lot of flexibility inyour education. How do you makerequirements like language re¬quirements and still preserve thatflexibility?Continued on page seven were an issue in the campaign or inwhich a candidate seemed hostileto women. In the Michigan andTexas gubernatorial races, for ex¬ample, heavily financed candi¬dates lost the women’s vote and therace after making scurrilous re¬marks about women, she said.Although women tend to voteDemocratic, Smeal said that a le¬gislator’s party affiliation does notnecessarily determine his or herattitude towards women’s issues.Eighty-three percent of the Repub¬licans voted against the EqualRights Amendment, but only 56percent of the Democrats voted forthe amendment, Smeal said.Women’s issues have been po¬larized by party, she believes, onlysince the election of President Rea¬gan.Fighting for women’s issues isdifficult, said Smeal, because ofcorporate opposition, the trivializ¬ing attitude of many male legisla¬tors, and women’s token participa¬tion in the legislatures. She citedthe jokes made by male Housemembers about wife beating dur¬ing a 1978 debate on battered-women shelters.•“We have not been able to makevisual the suffering of olderwomen, single women with chil¬dren, and the battered,” she said.Smeal quoted a woman senator,Nancy Kassenbaun of Kansas, assaying in a debate on the draft thatmany male legislators do not con¬sider their female colleagues ascapable in foreign affairs and mili¬tary matters. Smeal believed thesource of this derision to be in so¬cial stereotypes and women’s vir¬tual exclusion from participationin the military.“It is always the warrior classthat get the most benefits,” shesaid, while making clear her oppo¬sition to war.Corporate opponents to women’sissues are those who profit by un¬derpaying women, by giving themless opportunity, or, in the case of insurance companies, by discri¬minatory insurance rates, saidSmeal. The chief spokesmen for in¬surance companies led the fightagainst the ERA in many states. Amajor lobbyist against the amend¬ment was the Farm Bureau, whichowns 44 insurance companies, shesaid. To illustrate the discrimina¬tory basis of insurance rates,Smeal said that although womenhave fewer accidents than men,they pay the same insurance rate.Smeal called for feminists toelect more women into office andto enter political management po¬sitions. “It (gender) makes a dif¬ference,” Smeal said, pointing outthat in the state legislatures, only40 percent of the men were pro-ERA whereas 75 percent of thewomen were.“The structures benefit the in¬cumbents and the monies,” Smealsaid, “but we must somehow regis¬ter the power of our numbers with¬out the support of financial re¬sources.”Smeal said that women's con¬sciousness has become more politi¬cal in the past 10 years. Localwomen are forming Political Ac¬tion Committees (PAC) to fightcuts in health services, showing “adisgust to current programs ... andthe knowledge that it is a politicalthing and not simply an issuebased in the family.”The campus is an untapped polit¬ical resource, said Smeal. “Stu¬dents have disenfranchised them¬selves by not voting.” Women’ssupport and action groups shouldrecruit members to “lessen thesuffering” of women after theyleave the college “facade” ofequality for the work world.Smeal said she believes thatyoung women are at a “thresh-hold” because they will reap thebenefits of earlier fights by femin¬ists to open professional schoolsThey will not be regarded astokens in office, she said, aswomen are regarded today.A5HUMSeminar Series (981-65The Pregram in the Liberal Arts and Sciencef THE STUDENT/FACULTY COMMUTE ONBasic to Human Biology and tAedicini STUDENT SPEAKERSpresents a future m AT CONVOCATION%The Myth of - , — SOLICITSriumamsnc Medicine NOMINATIONSDr. Stephen EllChief Resident * Nominators and nominees mustbe graduating seniors; one maynominate oneself.Department of Radiology * Selection as a student speaker is* - | an honor. The speaker shouldbe willing and able to composeluesaay. May 10,19 83 and deliver a speech (3 - 5 min.)appropriate to the occasion.7:30 p.m. m Harder 103 * Nominating letters will be ac-cAlf interestedpersons are uwiteci to attend. cepted in the Office of the Deanof Students in the CollegeThere will be a reception with the speaker through 5:00 p.m., Monday, May16. Letters should give as muchin Harper z&Tj-o\iowuig the future. detail as possible.REYNOLDS CLUB NEW THEATERMAY 5, 6, 7 and 12, 13, 148 pm$3 Student, $3.50 General. $2.50 Groupon sale at R.C. Box Office & on campusl2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10. 1983 Director —Jay VogelMusical Directors -Jamie AllenDean GrosshandlerProducer —Pam NarinsNews BriefsGrad Intern paneldiscussion heldGraduate students who have internshipswith Chicago businesses will present a paneldiscussion Wednesday evening.The students work part-time in areas thatinclude editorial research, public relations,market analysis, management consulting,administration and fund-raising. They willdiscuss the relevance of graduate study tothe business world.The panel discussion is sponsored by theGraduate Intern Program, a new programwhich placed registered graduate students,primarily in the humanities and socialsciences, in part-time, paid positions. Theprogram will begin at 5 p.m. Wednesday inthe Reynolds Club, room 201.1-House testIn celebration of its 50th anniversary, In¬ternational House is reviving a traditionthat has lay dormant for 16 years. The Fes¬tival of Nations will be held on Sunday at In¬ternational House from 2:30 to 8:30 p.m. TheFestival which has been planned by Houseresidents will feature dance, music, films,cultural displays, food and beverages ofover 20 nations.Australian students will be dispensingfree samples of vegemite sandwiches andthe typical beverages of their country. TheJapanese will display floral arrangementsand present a traditional tea ceremony.Films from Iceland, Brazil, China, andother countries will be shown and souvenirsof those countries will be given as atten¬dance prizes. There will be falafel andhummos from the Middle East, tacos andempanadas from Latin America, as well ashot dogs and hamburgers from the USA.The $3 admission price includes entertain¬ment at the festival. Among the dancersperforming at the festival are the VictorClottey African Ensemble. Lakambini Per¬forming Arts (Filipino), the Classicalmarian realty,inc.REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available- Students Welcome -On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400PREPARE FORMCAT ★ SAT # LSAT ★ GMAT * GREINTRODUCTION TO LAW SCHOOLGRE PSYCH ★ GRE BIO * OCATVAT ★ MAT * SSAT ★ PSATDAT ★ ACHIEVEMENTS ★ ACTTOEFL * MSKP ★ NMB 1,11,111ECFMG * FLEX * VQE * RN BDSNDB 1,11* NPB 1 * ESLCPA * SPEED READINGflcaibt* Programs 8 Moo'lVratt Any Canf#f And S*« For YouraaifWhy W« Mafce Th# Di«*r«nce jSReading Course F«aiu«a» 1Rh D«mc LMSOr* alCan For Days A ** Stanley HKAPLANEDUCATIONALCENTERARLINGTON HEIGHTS CENTER2025 S ARLINGTON HEIGHTS ROADARLINGTON HEIGHTS IL 60005(312) 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER6216 N CLARK STCHICAGO. 'L 60660(312) 764*5151 highland park CENTER474 CENTRAL AVENUEHIGHLAND PARK »L 60035(312) 433-7410LAGRANGE CENTER19 S LAGRANGELAGRANGE IL 60525(312) 352-5840SPRING, SUMMER. FALL, INTENSIVEClasses StartingTHIS MONTH | NEXT MONTH• SUMMER GMAT/SAT..4WK/GMAT/LSATSPEED READING SUMMER ACT/MCAT..j SPEED READINGCourt** Conatafftty Update)Outeda Nr Star* 0*» CALL VOU FRff Mb 773 < 792Car-tea Maior US Crtwa Pu*dc A<co and Toronto Canada Dancers of the Thai Buddhist Temple, Dja-laal and the Women of the Veil (MiddleEastern), the Lasting Impressions HipanicDance Troupe, and the Windy Cindy MorrisWomen (British). Music will include the Ca¬ribbean Folk Reggae of Jah Love Music, aBrahms Concerto by the U of C ChamberChoir, folk music of Europe by Gallica, anda concert of classical Indian music with SomMajumdar on sitar.Tickets for the Festival are available inadvance at International House, 1414 E. 59thSt. For more information regarding thescheduling of particular events call 753-2270or 753-2274.Lecture on sculptorsProfessor Ellen Johnson of Oberlin Col¬lege will speak on “Reality in Abstraction:Five Contemporary Sculptors” Wednesdayat 7 p.m. in room 157 of the Cochrane WoodsArt Center. The lecture will concern theworks of Patricia Johanson, Eva Hesse,Jackie Winsor, Athena Tacha, and MaryMiss.$11,000 rewardfor info on arsonBy Cliff GrammichAn $11,000 reward has been offered for in¬formation leading to the arrest and convic¬tion of the person(s) who is responsible forthe arson fire at 5346 S. Cornell on May 1.According to Bob Mason, law enforcementcoordinator for the South East ChicagoCommission (SECC), the reward is being of¬fered by SECC and a group of insurancecompanies who have a standing reward ofup to $10,000 for information concerningarsons.The fire took place at approximately 2:20a.m. on May 1. Someone started fires whichburned the fire hoses on the fifth, sixth, sev¬enth, eighth and tenth floors, as well as acarpet in one of the building’s elevators.After meeting with tenants and representa¬tives of the city’s police, fire, and buildingAn Evening withDavidIgnatowFriday, May 13, 8 pmA Benefit Reading ForThe PoetryCenterThe School of theArt InstituteColumbus Drive andJackson BoulevardAdmission $5This program is supported inport by a grant from the IllinoisArts Council, a state agency. departments, the SECC decided to offer thereward.Those with information concerning thearson should either call the arson hotline at922-2323, the police department’s bomb andarson unit at 744-6273, or the SECC at324-6926.James RedfieldRedfield to speak onthe Locrian MaidensJames Redfield, professor in the depart¬ment of classical languages and literatureand the Committee on Social Thought, willdeliver a lecture titled “The Locrian Maid¬ens: Marriage as Sacrifice and Initiation”Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the East Lounge ofIda Noyes Hall. This is the fourth lecture inthe spring quarter series, “Approaches tothe Study of Women.”The term “Locrian Maidens” refers to aset of ritual arrangements whereby two girls were sent annually from mainlandLocri across the Aegean to the Troad. Therethey served for a year in the temple of Ath¬ena at New Ilion, the Greek town which wastreated as the successor of legendary Troy.Tradition held that this obligation of the Lo-crians was in expiation for the crime of Ajaxwho, at the time of the sack of Troy, had at¬tempted to rape Cassandra. In the strugglethat ensued, Ajax knocked over the statue ofAthena (the palladion), thus committing sa¬crilege against it. The ritual has a numberof odd features, most notably that the girlswere met on their arrival with a show offorce by the men of Ilion who attempted, atleast in theory, to kill them.In his talk, Redfield will argue that thismythical-ritual complex may be interpretedas an image of the Greek understanding ofmarriage and as a ritual attempt to enactand thereby control the social tension cen¬tering on marriage.Recommendded background readings forthe lecture are on reserve at Regenstein Li¬brary. The series, which has been organizedby the Women’s Union, is funded by theForum for Liberal Learning and the Univer¬sity of Chicago Women’s Board.Nominate seniorConvocation speakersDonald Levine, dean of the College, hasformed a committee to advise the presidenton the selection of one or two students gra¬duating from the College to speak for threeto five minutes at Convocation. The commit¬tee will seek nominations from the graduat¬ing students, and students may nominatethemselves. Nominations should be present¬ed in the form of a letter stating why a stu¬dent has been nominated to aid the commit¬tee in making its recommendation to thedean and the president. Nominating lettersaddressed to the committee will be acceptedin the Office of the Dean of Students in theCollege, Harper 281, through 5 p.m. Mon¬day.TuxedoRentalsAvailable$29.95upHyde Park Shopping Center752-8100All major credit cards acceptedThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983—3‘ v. >.»’r )*.TFOTA EVENTThe UC DanceClub andJansdancesperform original work & piecesby Chicago choreographers: A.Osgood, P. Dotson & D.Puszczewicz.Mandel HallSun., May 15 • 8:30 p.m.Tickets now on sale at theReynolds Club Ticket Center$1 UC Students | s2 Otherspartially funded by SGFC MAX ERNSTBooks and Graphic WorkMay 12 - June 15,1983Please join us at a Preview Reception onWednesday, May 11 from 5 to 7 p.m.Two musicians from the Marcel Duchamp MemorialPlayers will perform on saxophone and accordion.The David and Alfred Smart Gallery5550 South Greenwood AvenueHours: Tues.-Sat. 10-4 Sun. noon-4BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELDSummer 1983Off-Quarter CoverageJune 10th is the DEADLINE forenrollment!Applications are available inAdministration 103.Off-quarter coverage is available to degreestudents who are registered and participate inthe University Blue Cross/Blue Shield Plan thequarter prior to the off-quarter and who expect tobe registered and participate the quarter follow¬ing off-quarter. Off-quarter coverage is availableto degree students for one quarter of non¬registration in a 12-month period. Application foroff-quarter coverage must be made in theRegistrar’s Office and the fee must be paid uponapplying.4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983Striking Ouf/Dov/d BrooksThe happy life of OedipusStudents of classical drama are all famil¬iar with the text of Oedipus Eex, but fewknow exactly how the play was performedon opening night. Actually, it was staged ex¬actly as written up until the final scene whenthe Herdsman gives Oedipus some badnews:Herdsman: Oedipus, I’ve got some badnews.Oedipus: If you don’t have anything nice tosay don’t say anything at all.Herdsman: I know you don’t mean that.You’re famous for being a relentless pur¬suer of knowledge.Oedipus: It’s true that I like to gossip alot...Herdsman: It is my duty to tell you that youhave killed your father and slept with yourmother.Oedipus: Wow! What a bummer! Talkabout biting the hand that feeds you. Is it toolate to apologize?Sophocles from the audience, whispering:No! No! You’re supposed to gash your eyesout!Oedipus: Excuse me?Sophocles: Gash your eyes out.Oedipus: Now hold on a second. Let’s notmake any hasty decisions. I don’t see whatgood that will do. I mean, I didn’t mean tokill my father and sleep with my mother.You know how some parties are: drinkingall over the place, a lot of dancing, peopleget carried away — crazy things happen.(Jocasta, Oedipus’ wife enters) Guess what,honey. I’m your son!Jocasta: We’ve always been a close family.I’m proud of you for marrying such a nicegirl. Still, you could have paid a little moreattention to mother’s day.Sophocles: You guys aren’t following thescript. You’re supposed to be tormented byguilt. You’ve violated all sorts of moralcodes. You’re suffered from hubris. Don’tyou feel at all troubled?Oedipus: Considering I’m the hero in aGreek tragedy and the play is almost over, Ican’t complain. I‘ve got my health. And I’vegot the woman I love. (He kisses Jocasta onthe cheek)Sophocles: Listen Oedipus, this play ischock full of complex and profound themes.If you screw things up I’m going to write atrilogy and take your whole family to thecleaners.Oedipus: You playwrights are always think¬ing about themes and eternal laws. Us kingsjust want to fall in love. Besides, I saw yousmooching with Socrates’ boyfriend, thatguy who’s always taking notes. So don’t tellme you haven’t committed any transgressi¬ons in the name of love.Sophocles: That was not adultery. Our rela¬tionship is purely Platonic. You kings don’tunderstand profound thinking. Oedipus: I think profoundly all the time —mostly about cocktail waitresses and stew¬ardesses. But let’s face it, nobody should leta few twists of fate get in the way of a loveaffair. I’ll conduct a little survey, (address¬ing the audience) How many of you have ac¬cidentally killed your father and slept withyour mother? (60 or 70 hands are raised)And how many of you have gashed your eyesout? only 2 hands go up).Woman in the audience: I didn’t gash myeyes out but I did tickle myself merciless¬ly-Oedipus: See? Barely nobody gashes them¬selves just because they’ve broken a feweternal laws. The thing about moral trans¬gressions is that they stop being so inter¬esting after you’ve got your BA.Woman in the audience: That’s real deep. Ithink you’re very intelligent for a fictionalcharacter.Oedipus: Haven’t I seen you somewhere be¬fore? Would you like to spend a weekend atmy beachhouse? Answer the second ques¬tion first.Sophocles: Oedipus! You’re a marriedman!Oedipus: For Christ’s sake! I need a breakfrom this May/December marriage. Jocas¬ta is old enough to be my mother, (toWoman) I still say your face is familiar.Where are you from?Woman: Corcyra.Oedipus: Of course! I massacred your vil¬lage during the Peloponnesian War. Didn’t Ithrow you off a cliff or something? I betyou’d like me to do it again.Woman: You’ve got a lot of pride.Oedipus: I know. It’s one of my tragicflaws.Sophocles: Oedipus! You just said you lovedyour wife. You can’t have an affair with thiswoman! She’s from Corcyra. You’re fromthe mind of a brilliant playwright. Imaginewhat the children would be like.Oedipus: Hey Jocasta, would you mind if Imade it with this woman from Corcyra?Jocasta: I’d prefer you didn’t.Oedipus: Well that ends that. You see, mywife’s got dominion over my body. Life ischaos but Jocasta is Jocasta.Sophocles: Does that mean you love her?Oedipus: It’s a start.Sophocles: So You’re definitely not going togash your eyes out, and Jocasta’s not goingto hang herself?Oedipus: Afraid not, Sophie-baby. It was anice play, though. I forgot to thank you formaking me so three-dimensional. I’m sureyou’ve got plenty of great tragedies still infront of you, but this can’t be one of them. Ican’t let a few silly moral codes get in theway of Jocasta and me — not after all thenice conversations we’ve had. Love is sim¬ply too important to be left to the Gods. ^DepartmentofMustclTuesday, May 10 — Elizabeth Weber, soprano12:00 p.m., Good speed Recital HallWith Evangeline Mendoza Bourgeois, harpsichord and pianoWorks by Handel and SchumannAdmission is FREE.Thursday, May 12 — Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallJay Rosenblatt, pianoMusic of Franz Liszt: Selections from the Annees de Pelerinage,including “Vallee d'Obermann”.Admission is FREE.Saturday, May 14 & Sunday, May 15—University Chamber Orchestra8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallPeter Jaffe, conductorWith 1983 UNCO Concerto Competition winners: Elizabeth Baltas,flute, performing Frank Martin’s Ballade, and Bruce Tammen,baritone, performing Bach’s Cantata No. 56Other works include MozarT’s Overture to The Magic Flute andStravinsky 's Pulcinella SuiteThe program will be the same both nightsAdmission is FREE.nApcorruty UventsThursday, May 19 — Noontime Concert: Tom Shields, trumpetPhilip Fried, bass 12 1 5 p.m . Goodspeed Recital Hall FREE.Sunday, May 22 — Collegium Musicum with Mary Springtels,director. 3 00 p.m . Goodspeed Recital Hall Instrumental & vocalmusic of the Elizabethan Court and Theater. FREE.Sunday, May 22 & Saturday. May 28 — University Chorus &University Symphony Orchjestra performing on a Brahms BirthdayConcert 8:00 pm. Mandel Hall Barbara Schubert & RodneyWynkoop conductors Donations accepted at the doorri9n \The University of ChicagoDEPARTMENT OF ENGLISHannouncesa lecture series by the 1983 Frederic Ives Carpenter VisitingProfessorEDWARD W. SAIDauthor of Orientalism & The Questionof PalestineWednesday, May 11, 1983‘The Text's Slow Politics & the PromptLanguage of Criticism"Wednesday, May 18, 1983“Discrepant Histories & Revised Fictions"Wednesday, May 25, 1983“On the Secular Intellectual"All lectures will be at 4 p.m. in Swift Lecture Hall. The Public isinvited. Admission is free of charge.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983—5The International HouseFESTIVALOFNATIONS ■Featuring: Dance, Music, Films, Food, andBeverages from over 20 Nations!TICKETS: $2.50 in Advance • $3.00 at DoorSunday, May 15,19832:30 - 8:30 p.m.DANCE MUSIC3:00 p.m. African dance a musicThe Vistor Clattey EnselbleHAWAIIAN & TAHITIAN DANCEloana & Her Tropical Splendor4:00 p.m. FILIPINO DANCE: indo-malaysian,MOSLEM & SPANISH TRADITIONSLakambim Performing ArtsMIDDLE & NEAR EASTERN DANCESD/alaal A the Women of the Veil6 00 D m CLASSICAL & FOLK DANCES OFr' THAILANDThe School of the Thai Buddhist TempleANCIENT BRITISH CEREMONIALDANCE & MUSICThe Windy City Morris Women7:00 P.m. SOUTH AMERICAN 8. CARIBBEANDANCESLasting Impression Hispanic DanceTroupeBHARAT NATYAM SOUTH INDIANCLASSICAL DANCENatyakalalayam School of Indian ClassicalDance 3:00 p.m.FRENCH POPULAR SONGSBy Monique4:30 p.m. folk reggaeBy Jah Love Music5:00 p.m. brahms concertoBy The University Chamber Choir6:00 p.m. Russian. Israeli & Slavic songsBy Lori Lippitz7:30 p.m. folk music of EuropeBy Gallica8:30 p.m. Indian music concertSom Ma/umdar-SitarJagdish Pandit-VocalsAnanda Banerjee-TablaFilms and Travelogues from Argentina, Iceland, Greece,Japan, Brazil, Turkey, Australia, Peru etc.Food and Beverages from over 20 Nations.Cultural Displays, Games, Raffles, Prizes,International Wine-Tasting and more!1414 E. 59th StreetFor information call * 753"2274 OR 753"2270Sponsored by International House in conjunction with its residents andStudent Groups at the University of Chicago. MOVING?RYDER RENTS TRUCKS. ~z.t feu-'*< Vi. 'RRYDER15% OFFON LOCAL & ONE-WAY RENTALS• Local and one-way rates• Move with a friend.• Minimum age requirement to• Fast, easy ana dependable• One-Way & Local Moves• Good at either locationVISARyder Truck Rental, Inc.1050 W. Pershing RoadChicago523-5555 American AutoGlass7856 S. Stony Island768-7711Textbook orders forSummer & AutumnQuarters.If you are teaching nexttwo quarters, please sendus your order ASAP.6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983InterviewJaroslav Pelikan: keeping faith in general educationContinued from page onePelikan: As the saying goes, “That’s a goodquestion. Got any others?” For me, I got ahead start learning languages and such.Things just happened to fall into place. Butin general, it’s a paradox. There’s somecombination of having substantial early re¬quirements and then knowing when to getout of the person’s way. Mr. Hutchins usedto say, if over at Billings Hospital a patientcame in off the street and asked' the phar¬macist for whatever pills look nice to him,we’d go to jail for malpractice. And here wehave the most dangerous of all diseases: ig¬norance. And we allow people to come into acollege and do just that!Somebody in a field like yours, play-wrighting or musical competition, has to beprotected from the kind of early concentra¬tion in which his talents can immediatelyexercise themselves, but the more generalcontent of the tradition is lost. LeonardBernstein could have gone to Julliard. Hell,he had talent to burn. But he went to Har¬vard College and read all kinds of things.And he’s a card-carrying genius. I have a lotof young friends with lots of talent in the artsand I always urge them to be sure and getthe meat and potatoes in there.Maroon: The same conflict must occur with¬in academics as well. Certainly there’s anincentive to create your own field of re¬search and be your own expert and forgetthe traditions.Pelikan: Sure, it happens all the wayacross. Literary criticism is a good examp¬le. Where you can immediately create yourown vocabulary. For example, deconstruc¬tionism at Yale. They now have boa-con-structionalism. It’s wild.One solution is to get what we call generaleducation back into the early years ofschooling. For instance, languages. That’s the time to learn languages. And of coursethe college has to take what comes.Maroon: When a friend of mine was decid¬ing whether or not to attend Chicago hermother advised her not to go because if sheread all that philosophy she would becomean atheist. Do you think that kind of fear iscommon or justified?Pelikan: Both. Always has been. When Iwas a student at Chicago in 1944 we used tosay Chicago was a Baptist university whereatheist professors teach Jewish students St.Thomas Aquinas. That’s the old bugbear. Ifyou think too hard, you’re going to revitalizeyour convictions. I don’t know where youcan go to be protected from that. Reading alittle philosophy is much worse than readinga lot of it. That anti-intellectual streak,which is present in our various religious tra¬ditions is an epidemic in the American tradi¬tion — religious or not. Some church col¬leges say they will protect you from that.Maroon: People definitely think in more rel¬ative terms these days. Is that because ofacademics?Pelikan: Yes. Some of it is. That’s a conse¬quence of a lot of things. The whole plura¬lism of culture. You can no longer excludefrom conversation the beliefs of other tradi¬tions than your own. Certainly academicstudy has done that, and continues to dothat. And it’s a good thing. Because the kindof absolute belief that maintains itself bypretending it has a corner on the ultimate isirreverent. To suppose that the ultimate ismanipulable and disposable is blasphemy.What the discovery of relativism does is tolet God be God again. To show the mysteri¬ousness of the ultimate and the partiality ofour perceptions.Maroon: But doesn’t relativism affect ourunderstanding of traditional religious con¬ cepts. I’ve been thinking that not too manymembers of my generation have as clear anotion of sin as the people living centuriesago had.Pelikan: I wonder about that. Psychiatriststell me that what they have to deal with alarge part of the time is guilt. Guilt todaymay be more imminent in its focus. But fora generation that doesn’t have a sense of sinwe certainly have a lot of guilt. What wehave today is a widespread suspicion, whichI share, of the institutionalization of values,beliefs and practices in churches, syna¬gogues, universities even the government.Theirs are beliefs that people would tend toaffirm except for those who seem to havecontrol over it. You have it in the arts. WTienan establishment decrees how things aregoing to be then you have to find some wayof breaking it down. Clememceau said thatwar is too important to be left to generals, soI suppose literature is too important to beleft to professors of English and music tooimportant to be left to boards of directors ofopera companies and religion too importantto be left to bishops.Maroon: Do you think people have becomemore rebellious as time has passed? Wehave this notion of everybody believing inGod in the middle ages and now barely any¬body does and things have been deteriorat¬ing all the way down. Is that true?Pelikan: Of course not. That’s not the past;that’s somebody’s recreation like Williams¬burg, Virginia. Are we more rebellious? Insome ways we are less. We are also con¬cerned with paying things safe. The fear oftaking chances....I find it in students. Myformer president, Kingman Brewster,talked about a grim professionalism in ourundergrads.Maroon: When people talk about pre-profes¬sionalism, I think it’s tough to fault students for the rules that have been laid out for themby graduate school admissions committeesand the like.Pelikan: You’re right. It’s the parents. I’vehad many arguments with parents who tryto shoot me down for trying to push generaleducation on their kids. As the costs go up,it’s a considerable investment.One change that’s happened to me: I leftChicago 21 years ago. At Chicago, I nevertaught an undergraduate. And now, three-quarters of my students are undergradu¬ates. In the 1950s, I was in the mining ratherthan the minting stage of my career. Gradu¬ate students are very important at thatstate. They’ll stop you if you’re interpretingthe text wrong. And they’ll have the kind ofresearch-oriented questions that a scholarwho is still digging needs. But when you getto the stage where you’re explaining yourfind, there, undergrads are far better.Maroon: Of course the traditional path isjust the reverse.Pelikan: That’s right. Somebody just out ofgraduate school teaching undergrads isalways one jump ahead of the sheriff. Thoseare the people who should be teaching grad¬uates.Maroon: Have you perceived differences inChicago since you left.Pelikan: I don’t get back that often. ThoughI think one is a greater awareness of the Col¬lege by the faculty and administration.There has always been a danger that the col¬lege would become a PhD pre-school.Maroon: I have felt like that quite often inthe history department.Pelikan: Yes. Yale started out as a collegeso there you don’t feel that you’re reallyteaching at Yale unless you teach college.Chicago never had that, but I do have thesense that Hanna Gray is very sensitive tothat.FOR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO EMPLOYEESEnrollment is now open forMichael Reese Health PlanJoin a health center:Oak Park Southeast Evergreen Lakeshore1515 N. Harlem Ave. 2315 E. 93rd St. 9435 S. Western Ave. 3055 S. Cottage Grove Ave.Michael Reese Health Plan Members enjoy convenient comprehensive coverage: No deductibles,no co-payments, no claim forms for care including office visits, vision care, diagnostic tests, surgery,hospitalization, emergencies covered at 100%.Add up what you really pay for health care: After paying deductible and co-payments, you’ll bepleased to discover the full benefit of the Michael Reese Health Plan.Compare your monthly contribution: Individuals FamiliesMichael Reese Health PlanBlue Cross/Blue Shield Awith major medicalBlue Cross/Blue Shield B 0 $ 6.18$1.65 $19.00$1.00 $ 8.00INVESTIGATE: For information call 791-2909, or stop by BillingsRoom G104 Wednesday, May 11, noon - 6 p.m.and Thursday, May 13, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.. . . because you deserve an educated choice.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983—7by Margo HablutzelSomething that prospective students arenever told, and few matriculating studentsever discover, is the University’s grislyhistory of student murderers. Not thedri ve-your- roommate-to- j ump-of f-Reg-so-you-get- all-A’s-and-a-trip-to- Aspentype of killing that everyone jokes about,but the stories of students who committedand were tried for murders. With theHeirens case making headlines again,after 37 years, and a lengthy UniversityHistory piece on Leopold and Loeb earlierthis year, perhaps it is time to examinethis unsettling chapter in the history of theUniversity of Chicago.Overall, there is little that is similarbetween the two cases Nathan F. Leopold,Jr. and Richard Loeb were from wealthy year, two women — one of them a formerWAVE — were murdered in theirapartments. On one wall of the WAVE’Shouse the killer had scrawled a message inlipstick: “For Heaven’s sake catch mebefore I kill more. I cannot controlmyself.”On Jan. 7, 1946, six-year-old SuzanneDegnan was taken from her second-floorbedroom, strangled, and dismembered,with the pieces of her body deposited incatch basins in the area. Althoughmurders were never unheard-of inChicago, this one terrified the city. Onepolice reporter reminisced: “People wouldkeep their children indoors, they wereabsolutely terrified...”Six and one-half months later, in earlysummer, a commotion in Rogers ParkDial U of Cfor MumerHyde Park families, and in 1924 werenineteen-year-old graduate students in lawand history respectively at the Universityof Chicago, living at home. Their victimwas a fourteen-year-old boy named BobbyFranks who also lived in Hyde Park, andwas abducted by Leopold and Loeb as hewalked home after umpiring aneighborhood baseball game. As Franks’parents prepared to pay a $10,000 ransom,his mutilated body was found in a culvert.Detectives traced a pair of glasses foundnearby to Leopold, and after his chauffeurexposed their alibi and the two confessed,saying that they “had planned since lastfall...some time in November” to committhe kidnapping-murder, and had heldevery expectation of succeedingundetected.After Leopold and Loeb confessed, theirfathers hired Clarence Darrow to defendtheir sons. After a trial which pitted agrisly murder (Franks’ body had beendoused with acid to prevent identification)against a plea of guilty by mental illness(Darrow brought in a number ofpsychiatrists who contributed over 300pages of official testimony), the verdictwas “life plus 99 years.” The deathpenalty was not given because the judgesaid he had taken into consideration theyouth of the defendantsFor Richard Loeb, the sentence was adeath penalty; he died in 1936 after beingstabbed by a fellow inmate. NathanLeopold died in Puerto Rico in 1971, havinglived there since his parole 14 yearsearlier.In 1946, William George Heirens was aseventeen-year-old freshman at theUniversity of Chicago, living in Snell Hall.A few years earlier this son of a steel millexecutive had been brought before a judgeon charges of burglary, and had been sentto a private school after swearing to thejudge that he would change his ways.In June and December of the previous caught the attention of an off-dutypoliceman who was walking home with hisfamily after a day at the beach. Usingsome flowerpots the off-duty policemanbrought down a young man who wasfleeing from' a group of others, includingsome uniformed policemen. The youngman was Heirens, who had been surprisedwhile in the midst of a daylight burglary.Two days later, a fingerprint checkconfirmed by the FBI showed that one ofHeirens’ fingerprints matched those left ona ransom note in Suzanne’s bedroom.Subsequently, Heirens confessed tomurdering not only the little girl, but alsothe two women who bad died the previousyear. But he placed the blame on an evilalter ego, one that prowled through thenight seeking ways to satisfy his strangedesires. Later he would recant, but at thetime both the prosecutors and the defenseattorneys wanted to avoid a trial, so aftera period of debate and argument Heirensagreed to plead guilty to all three counts.In return he received not a death penaltybut three consecutive life sentences.As the years passed, Heirens claimedthat the confession Was forced, that he wasthe scapegoat for “a lynch atmosphere.”Like Leopold and Loeb he became a modelprisoner, and in 1972 became the firstprisoner in Illinois to receive a collegedegree white incarcerated.At the end of last month, US MagistrateGerald Cohn ordered Heirens to bereleased today, saying that he would staythe order only to give the state time todevelop a parole plan. Last Friday theorder was blocked by the Seventh CircuitUS Court of Appeals, which has set amid-September date for hearing oralarguments from the state and Heirens’court-appointed attorney This came aftera storm of public outcry against theMagistrate’s decision, with even Gov.James Thompson arguing against Heirens’release. Heirens himself contends that heDoes the End ofthe Term Mean theEnd of Your HospitalInsurance Protection?Short Term Hospital plan providesfast low cost “interim” coverage ifyou're in between jobs, or recentlygraduated.It offers a choice of 60, 90, 120,or 180 day protection. Comprehen¬sive coverage. Low rates. And thepolicy can be issued on the spot.That quick.Let me tell you the details of thisquick coverage plan.Lord & RogersInsurance Agency4747 West Peterson Avenue Suite 400Chicago, Illinois 60646282-6900 coxLOUNGEOUTDOORBARBEQUEfeaturingVz lb. hamburgersfresh sausagesdaily grill specialsBegins May 9(weather permitting)Hours: 11 -2:30 p.m.Located BehindStuart Hall is “a good risk” for parole and says thathe would work at any job — although hewould prefer one in electronics, for whichhe is trained — to support himself.Illinois Attorney General Neil Hartigan’scriminal appeals chief had warned shortlybefore the Appeals Court’s decision thatafter 37 years in prison Heirens might notbe able to adapt to living withoutsupervision, hi an “unstructuredenvironment.”With prisoners being released on paroleevery day, many of them murderers, whyhas the Heirens case caused so muchpublic outcry and received so muchattention? Many of today’s adults werechildren when Suzanne Degnan wasmurdered, and one man who was nineyears old in January of 1946 said “I’llnever forget lying in bed quaking, fearingthat her killer would be after me.” Just asthe kidnapping-murder of CharlesLindbergh Jr. a generation before hadterrified children who heard of it, so didSuzanne Degnan’s murder terrify childrenin 1946.Another reason, one which has beenmuch-discussed over the past two weeks,is the question of the rehabilitation ofcriminals who have committed violentcrimes. It is a question what which hasoften been brought up in defense of thedeath penalty and sentences which, bytheir length, would act as death penalties.Many people cite the Code of Hammurabi,saying “an eye for an eye; a tooth for atooth” extends naturally to “a life for alife.” When Heirens was sentenced in thelate 1940s, rehabilitation and reform werethe watchworks, with many feeling thateducation and medical treatment wouldprevent prisoners from deteriorating in“prison warehouses4’ and would enablethem to return to society. Recently, thequestion has turned away from the abilityof prisoners to be reformed to the ability ofsociety to determine when a prisoner istruly rehabilitated, particularly in the caseof those who have committed especiallyviolent crimes, or who are repeatoffenders. !One key point in Heirens’ bid forfreedom is a psychological examinationadministered a year ago which found himfree of “mental defects,” and which saidthat Heirens has “dearly maximized anybenefits that could be derived from anincarceration experience.” Ibis isespecially important because of Heirens’contention that an uncontrollable evil alterego was in control of his body when the .crimes were committed. But since theexamination finds that this is no longer aconsideration, should it be used indetermining Heirens’ degree ofrehabilitation?It is interesting that there is no record ofwhether such an examination wasadministered to Nathan Leopold before hisparole, because of the similarities betweenthe two cases. Both times the defendantwas accused of a particularly grislymurder, both times part or all of thedefense involved contentions of mentalillness (Darrow brought up the sexualinstability of Leopold’s and Loeb’s nannies,which he said had adversely affected theboys, while Heirens’ defense hinged on the“evil alter ego”), both came Intoprominence for the murders of children inwhich there was a ransom note (one hadbeen left in Suzanne's bedroom, but herbody was found before the note was actedupon, both defendants were tried amidgreat public demand for their deaths, bothpleaded guilty to igiven longebecameLeopold was 1research,Rico. Ifnever befour yearstime of hisPerhapsdeterminiHeirensmurders ofDegnan wcHLeopold admitted to jseveral mon&g in iminor detaftef <going to ki^blamedan unconttoday mi{guilty byHeirens In jwas jt harges, both wereterms, and bothrs in prison. Yetdo volunteer work,teaching in Puertots way, Heirens mayiough he has servedLeopold did at thet factor inof Leopold andier in which thes and Suzanne. In his confession,fanning the murderance, except for thehe and Loeb werens’ confession“George Murman,”ego, a defense thatment of “notty” and placefacility until he I^eopold never dented that he committedFranks’ murder, saying that if all hadgone as planned he and Loeb would neverhave been caught. Heirens recanted,saying that his confession was forced andthat he had never written the dramatic“For Heaven’s sake catch me before I killmore. I cannot control myself” messageon the wall of one of the women he wasaccused of murdering Hater evidencepointed to the message having beenconcocted and inscribed by a reporter whowanted to make the story a bit moredramatic).Who would people more want to havefreed, a model prisoner who planned andexecuted a grisly murder, or a modelprisoner who blamed the murders forwhich he was sentenced on an evil alterego? The chance that someone whoplanned and took pride in the execution ofa murder would commit another might belessened as the person grew older,particularly if his partner in the crime washimself dead. The chance that someo onewho lost control to a second self wouldcommit another murder may be moredifficult to determine. Yet a psychologicalexamination has shown him to be freed ofany mental defects, and the prisonerhimself contends that he would be a goodchoice for parole.There have been other cases of peopledenied parole due to public outcry or thenature of their crimes including CharlesManson, Sirhan B. Sirhan, and RichardSpeck. All of these men have committedtheir crimes in the past two decades;Heirens committed bis nearly four decadesago. Yet the fear is still so great, thememory of Suzanne Degnan’s death still sofresh, that be, like Richard Loeb, may diein prison, but of old age, not stabbing.Did the wealth of Leopold and Loeb’sfamilies have any effect on theirtreatment? Possibly, for the fathers hiredthe best and best-known lawyer of the dayto defend their sons, and their positionmay have had an unacknowledged effecton the boys’ sentencing and treatment. InHeirens’ case, his family was reported tohave entirely changed their names — firstand last — and moved away within a yearof his incarceration.Will the cases and trials of Jack HenryAbbott and John Hinkley Jr. have anyeffect on the decisions to grant or denyparole to Heirens? Abbott has been aliveonly slightly longer than Heirens has beenin jail; he has spent a greater portion ofhis life in jails. Shortly after his parole twoyears ago Abbott faced a murder charge,and was convicted on the charge ofmanslaughter by reason of “extremeemotional disturbance. ’’ Hinkley wasjudged not guilty by reason of insanityafter he attempted to kill the President toimpress actress Jodie Foster.Unlike Hinkley, Heirens was not judgedinsane; unlike Sirhan and Hinkley he didnot kill (or attempt to kill) a politicalfigure; unlike Abbott he had not spent hislife in jail and he has never been paroled.There seems to be no clear precedent forWilliam George Heirens’ case, just asthere was no clear precedent for any of theothers. Nathan Leopold was eventuallyparoled to live out his life in anothercountry, without his friend Richard Loeb,a model prisoner who became a modelparolee. This was in the age ofrehabilitation and reform, an age whichHeirens was sentenced, an age which weare finally seeing the results of on agreater and greater scale. It is unlikelythat any of the four more recentmurderers, or Hinkley, will ever be freed.Heirens Is between the two groups, ageneration from both Leopold and Loeband the others. More than two-thirds of hislife was spent in jail; unless his attorneyfinds some very compelling reasons forhim to be freed, and some unquestionableproofs to s«$port those reasons, it seemslikely that he will spend the rest of his lifein jail. lPiilp|piBOf a University oftried and/orThere isChicago sconvictedthe schoolof such anLeopoldGeorgeUniversichapterbe partiinspiredincludingis now ve the early days ofre been any recordince. Nathanand Williamise a chapter of thethemselves, aniversity may notone which hasiterary efforts,play, and one whichnews.•—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10,1983 On■ .-niv.'irdsmost• > nt.u•One:■nr* na Wasthe DiDif'srrniemo1 niratin thehnvin)ThaiextrenBut wlsoutheDuSatexped1961 b;artistsintereculturin honman obecanrChicaj“Thdeterfof bla<blackdeclardirectThisthe chrepresthe Inacconby Michael ElliottOn the west side of Cottage GroveAvenue at 56th Street, less than a hundredyards from Hyde Park but beyond wheremost University of Chicago studentsventure, sits the DuSable Museum ofAfrican-American History. Located in abrown limestone building that once houseda Washington Park administration office,the DuSable Museum attempts “topreserve, exhibit, and interpret *memorabilia of Afro-American forChicago, America, Africa, and the world”in the words of its founder and maindriving force, Margaret Burroughs. first expedition to the North Pole, andLangston Hughes, the Pulitzer-prize-winingpoet from Harlem who is famous for suchworks as “The Negro Speaks of Rivers”and “Harlem.”In addition, the museum has a collectionof relics from ancient African civilizations,accompanied by extensive explanations ofthe political and intellectualaccomplishments of these civilizations.“For centuries, blacks have been totally PromotingAfro-AmericanCulturePHOTO BY ARA JELALIANEugene Goldman, director of the DuSable MuseumThat’s a pretty tall order, even for theextremely energetic staff of the Museum.But while its success may be limited to thesouthern regions of the Chicago area, theDuSable Museum has fulfilled theexpectations of its creators. Founded in1961 by a seven member committee ofartists, educators, and other professionalsinterested in promoting Afro-Americanculture, the DuSable Museum was namedin honor of Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, aman of French and African descent whojecame the first non-native settler of theChicago area in 1779.“The name reflects Burrough’sjetermination to improve the self-esteem>f black children by telling them of great>lack writers, artists, and scientists,”ieclares Eugene Feldman, the assistantlirector of the Museum.This determination is also reflected inhe choice of the Museum’s collection. Itepreaents men such as Matthew Henson,he Inuit-speaking Arctic explorer whoccorapanied Adm. Robert Perry on the ignored in history texts. Africa wasreferred to as ‘the Dark Continent,’implying ignorance and savagery. Blackinvolvement in major world events wasoften glossed over,” Feldman explained.“We try to show the great universities ofAfrica that existed before Europeanuniversities and the importantcontributions of blacks to history so thatblack children can look upon their heritagewith pride.”The DuSable Museum has its roots inearlier cultural organizations on the SouthSide that Burroughs helped found andpromote. Raised in the Chicagoneighborhood of Engelwood, Burroughsparlayed an early talent for art into acareer as a poet and teacher. Whileheading the DuSable High School ArtDepartment, Burroughs helped form theSouth Side Community Art Center.Dedicated by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1938,the South Side Community Art Center wasfunded by the Works ProgressAdministration (WPA) as part of President Roosevelt’s attempt to revivethe cultural life in America as well as itseconomic life during the Depression. Inhelping to finance the South SideCommunity Art Center, the WPA also gavesome of the first official recognition of thequality of black art and culture inAmerica.At the same time, Burroughs was alsoworking for the Youth NAACP writingarticles about classical scholars of Africaand poems such as “What Shell I Tell MyChildren Who Are Black.” Here sheconceived the goals of educating blackchildren about their history that theMuseum tries to carry out today.“I saw that art wasn’t to be locked up inan ivory tower, but should communicate topeople,” Burroughs said.She tried to bring those words to life,organizing such events as the LakeMeadows Art Fair, the Chatham Art Fair,and the Chicago-based NationalConference of Artists. But it was not until1960 that she was able to realize her dreamof a building devoted strictly to blackculture.Burroughs and her husband purchasedthe mansion of John Griffith, the architectof Union Station, and together with fiveother co-founders opened th£ originalDuSable Museum on the 3800 block ofSouth Michigan Avenue. In 1971, theMuseum took up the lease of a dilapidatedPark building and moved to its presentsite, greatly expanding the Museum’s floorspace and resources. Plans are nowunderway for building a new wing to housemore gallery space, along with a theater, aclassroom, and an art studio for thoseworking on African designs.“We turned this building into the gem ofWashington Park,” Burroughs proudlyproclaims.Walking into the DuSable museum, withits tinted window panes and modemsculpture garden, one is indeed struck byits beauty. One is also struck by itsemptiness. Those expecting to beoverwhelmed by a vast assortment ofrelics that tell the story of blacks inAmerica will be disappointed. Most of thecollection is widely spread through fivemoderately large rooms, and each displayusually consists of a few bits ofmemorabilia around a large plaquedescribing some person or event worthy ofnote. It is very important that a blackchild learn that men such as WEB.Dubois and Louis “Satchmo” Armstrongexisted; but its questionable how muchmore he is going to learn about them byexamining such trinkets as an honorary robe that Dubois received from theUniversity of Ghana or a cornet case thatbelonged to Louie Armstrong.When questioned about the paucity of theMuseum’s collection, Burroughs repliedthat the strength of the Museum lies morein its community activities than in itsgallery displays.“There’s a lot more to the Museum thanwhat you see on the shelves,” shecontended. “Among other things, wesponsor an oratorical contest for highschool seniors and an essay contest forjunior high school students. We also put onan annual book fair consisting of the allthe books about blacks and minorities thathave come out in the past year.”Burroughs also pointed out a 10,000 booklibrary, large collections of audio-visualmaterials, and a well-trained staff allavailable to help people researching blackhistorical figures and black culture. AndBurroughs would like to add Hyde Park toits list of communities in which theDuSable Museum is active.“Since we are neighbors, I’d like towelcome the students and faculty of theUniversity to come and see what wehave,” she said.Emphasizing that “the DuSable Museumis for all people,” Burroughs pointed to theelection of Harold Washington as showingthat Chicago “is not the most racist city inAmerica, that, on the contrary, there areso many minorities in this city that give itgreat strength and cultural wealth.”And of the University of Chicago itself,Burroughs professed a hope for closer tieswith the University : “We would like toestablish closer contact with theUniversity. We would like to take internslooking for experience, we would like morevisits from the Lab School, we would likecloser contact with the HistoryDepartment.”Speaking of a time when the U of Chosted a delegation of African eductors,Burroughs said, “They were staying atInternational House and had had littlecontact with the black community eventhough they were only a few blocks awayfrom it. The University contacted us, andwe arranged meetings, dinners, and evenhad some of the members of the delegationstay as guests in some homes. We helpedstart friendships that have lasted yearsand spanned continents.”The DuSable Museum is open Mondaythrough Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. andSaturday and Sunday from noon to 5 p.mAdmission is free with a suggesteddonation of $1.00.PHOTOGRAPHIC & OFFICEFILM MACHINE DEPTPROCESSINGRENTALSBATTERIESRADIOSFRAMES CAMERASPHOTO ALBUMSDARKROOM EQ.CASSETTE TAPERECORDERSVIDEO TAPEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE970 EAST 58 TH ST.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1963—9Sports3 LBS. OR MORE85% EXTRA LEANFRESHGROUNDBEEFRIPECALIFORNIAAVOCADOS8 02. CARTONSREG. 63* EACHDANNONYOGURT2 LTR. BOTTLEREG. OR DIET7-UPU.S.D.A. CHOICEBEEF BLADE-CUTGIANT SIZEREG. 2.51 • SAVE 52*!64 OZ. JUGSPEAS FARMAPPLEJUICECHEESE OF THE WEEKREG. $3.69 • SAVE 70*FRENCHBRIETHIS WEEK:MEXICAN FOODFESTIVAL!12 OZ. REG. 2.25VAN DE CAMPSBEEF OR CHEESEENCHILADA 199DINNERS I4 OZ. KRAFTAGED, SHREDDEDCHEDDAR 7QcCHEESE /ST12 OZ. DEL REY39°160Z.OLD ELPASO49“FINER FOODS.SERVINGS3rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLA2A .2911 VERNONiNnere tou Art A Vrdrut' Bl! Once IM softball marred by rain and no-showsBy John VispoelSpring! A time for starting romances,having outdoor barbecues, drinking beeroutside, and of course, playing IM Softball.Here at the University of Chicago, the startof a new softball season reminds one ofdropping fly balls, collisions between field¬ers, the familiar sound of bat meeting air,but through it all, a great time on the mid¬way. This season, however, has beenmarred by rainy weather which caused thecancellation of many games, and by forfeitsby the dozens.Nevertheless, there has been some soft-ball action in the last two weeks. On April 24,in a graduate men’s tournament, the Ratsdefeated Fujila 5-3 on the strength of a four-run fourth-inning rally to win the tourna¬ment. In undergraduate men’s tourna¬ments, Lower Flint crushed Dodd/Meal 16-4and Upper Rickert ‘B’ 17-8, and Hendersonripped Greenwood 16-2 and Upper Rickert‘A’ 11-3. In the latter tournament, a closelyfought game between Dewey and Green¬wood was decided in the final inning on atwo-run spurt by Dewey to give it a 5-4 victo¬ry.In divisional action, the Falcon Inn Fal¬cons pounced on N.U.T.S. 23-4 to assumefirst place in the undergraduate indepen¬dent division. However,.in the open recre¬ation division, Fujita’s Echo squeaked bythe Falcon Inn Falcons 13-11 to assume firstplace.In the undergraduate resident men’s divi¬sion white, Compton outhit Thompson 20-15and Fallers 10-3 the only games in the divi¬sion to assume first place. In the red divi¬sion, Dodd/Mead climbed to the top of thedivision by defeating Commuters by thescore of 7-3. In the blue division, Chamberlinoutscored Lower Rickert 15-3 in the battle oftwo highly-favored teams.The University of ChicagoCourt Studio TheaterpresentsJewish Community Center, 110 HydePark Boulevard, Chicago, IL 00015.200-4000. GROUP RATES available.Adult* It" Student* and Senior Cltixenc II"Michael Hildebrand DirectorAnita Greenberg Muilcal DirectorMargaret Withoviby Awl*tant to tho DirectorRon Groan# Set DirectorGrog Mermoi Lighting DirectorDon# by permi*tIon of Tams-Witmorh Muilcallibrary, Inc.An affiliate of the Jewish federation ofMetropolitan Chicago and lupported by tho JewishUnited Fund. In the coed resident undergraduate divi¬sion red, Hale jumped two places from thirdto first by trouncing on Lower Flint 19-2. Inthe coed graduate division, Dred Scott’s Re¬venge dramatically climbed from sixth tofirst on the strength of three forfeits and a11-6 victory over Brideshead Unvisited.In the graduate men’s red division, Cine¬ma Face maintained its hold on first by edg¬ing Diamondhead Incarnate 12-11, and in theGraduate Men’sFujila 15 B-Men 0The Bats 5 Fujila 3The Bats (forfeit) Barney’s Meat MarketB-Men (forfeit) Barney’s Meat MarketUndergraduate Men’sLower Flint 16 Dodd/Mead 4Lower Flint 17 Upper Rickert ‘B’ 8Upper Rickert ‘B’ (forfeit) SalisburyDodd/Mead (forfeit) SalisburyHenderson 16 Greenwood 2Henderson 11 Upper Rickert ‘A’ 3Upper Rickert ‘A’ 14 Dewey 6Dewey 5 Greenwood 4Falcon Inn Falcons 23 N.U.T.S. 4Feel Your Disease 4 Phi Delta Theta 3Golden Nuggets (forfeit) MichelsonCompton 20 Thompson 15Compton 10 Fallers 3Dodd/Mead 7 Commuters 3Breckinridge 10 Henderson 9Breckinridge (forfeit) CommutersBreckinridge 8 Hitchcock ‘A’ 5Chamberlin 15 Lower Rickert 5Open RecFujita’s Echo 12 Medici 5Fujita’s Echo 13 Falcon Inn Falcons 11Open Rec CoedSymphonic Metamorphosis 23 King Clone 11Orly’S 23 Coprolites 5 white division, Fybigmi replaced Fred &Ethel as the top team by defeating it 22-5.In other divisions, few games have beenplayed. Of the 50 games scheduled, only 35have been played. Much of the movement indivisions has been due to the absence ofteams. Perhaps, we should give the IM Soft-ball program a new name, the IM Atten¬dance league. However, the caliber of soft-ball that has been played has been high.Dudley (forfeit) ComptonHitchcock-Snell 20 Greenwoiod 4Hale 19 Lower Flint 2Dugan’s Golden Nugget 17 Commuters 8Dugan’s Golden Nugget 17 Thompson 3Lower Flint 19 Bradbury 2Upper Flint 19 Tufts 15Graduate CoedDred Scott’s Revenge (forfeit) Wailing WhalesDred Scott’s Revenge (forfeit) Hittens on the RunDred Scott’s Revenge (forfeit) Law SchoolDred Scott’s Revenge.il •• Brideshead Unvisited 6Brideshead Unvisited (forfeit) Law SchoolWailing Whales 16 Brickbats 15Brickbats (forfeit) Law SchoolUndergraduate WomenHome Platelets 16 Upper Wallace 4Home Platelets 22 Snell 0Hale (forfeit) SnellUpper Wallce 8 Snell 2Sports CalendarMen’s TennisMay 12-15 — at NCAA Division III NationalChampionshipsStudents for Israel presentsYom Yerushalayim(Jerusalem Day)May 11th • 8:00 p.m.with two short films“And on the Seventh Day”“Jerusalem: City of Peace”and comments by Jerusalem Native and U.C. StudentAmos Hoffmanat Hillel House • 5715 S. Woodlawn Ave.Shorey versus BreckinridgeIM Softball PHOTO BY ARA JELAUANUndergraduate Coed10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983SportsMaroonsOlivet sweeps doubleheader fromBy Don HaslamThe University of Chicago Maroons’ var¬sity baseball team dropped two close gamesto Olivet Nazarene Friday at Tiger Field.The Tigers won the first game, 11-10, in thebottom of the seventh, and won the secondgame, 14-6, with a nine-run sixth inning.The Maroons hitting was impressive, ashas been the case in the last four games, butpoor pitching and fielding gave away whatshould have been two strong Maroon vic¬tories.The Maroons started the first game rightoff with Wade Lewis’ single and Matt Koen¬ig’s double against breaking-ball pitcher Tu-gahubie Yajima. Lewis moved to second ona Mike Medina sacrifice, and scored on Koenig’s smash to center field.In the second inning, first baseman JohnGernon hung a ball up into the strong out¬going wind and tallied the team’s firsthome-run of the year. The Tigers reboundedwith two hits and two runs in the bottom ofthe inning to knot the score at two.The game remained tied until the fourthinning, when the Tigers jumped on pitcherTom Weber for three runs on three singles, awalk, and one error The Maroon bats re¬mained silent in the top of the fifth, and theTigers extended their lead to 6-2 with twohits in the bottom half of the inning. NickLarson relieved Weber in the inning and putout the next three batters in order.The Maroons jumped to life in the sixth in¬ ning. Designated batter Bob Dickey led offthe five-run burst with a single. Right field¬er Bill Jankovich drove Dickey in to scorewith a double to left field. After sophomoresecond baseman Andy Saliman’s strikeoutand Gemon’s intentional walk, left fielderTom Ashburr loaded the bases with a singleto right. Lewis then brought in Jankovichand Gennon with a single. He moved to sec¬ond on Medina’s bunt and scored on thirdbaseman Dennis Werner’s single. Wernerwas thrown out at second base to end the in¬ning.The Tigers tied the score in the bottomhalf of the sixth inning at 7-7 as Larsonwalked three of six batters. Courson Maleycame on in relief and put out the first batterGertie’s stuns Giordano’s in IM socimBy Jeff TaylorEven the best-laid plans sometimes goawry.Giordano’s, after edging the Saudi UnionMovement 3-2 last week, was eliminated inovertime Friday by a gusty Gertie’s teamthat apparently prepared for the playoffs bymunching nails.The score was tied at 1-1 when playstopped for the half, and Gertie’s seemed tobe playing over its head. One Gertie’splayer was overheard from his team’s half¬time huddle, insisting loudly that “we’regonna beat their asses!” I scoffed. The fansscoffed. Giordano’s scoffed. That’s why weall felt a little silly when Gertie’s dominatedthe second half much as they had done in the first, only more so.But Gertie’s defense could not totally con¬tain Giordano’s incredible offense, whopassed, shot and dribbled with infinite skilland grace. Giordano’s offensive playmakeris Gerardo Leon, not Fernando Coloma (asreported in last Friday’s Maroon), but itwas Coloma who scored late in the secondhalf to keep his team’s hopes alive.Meanwhile, Gertie’s forward Jim Kamenscored both of his team’s regulation goals.Kamen is quick, experienced and smart onthe field; it’s players like him that make meglad my team plays in the undergraduateleagues. The game-winner was scored byPete Wendel three minutes into overtime.In other graduate playoff games, Interna¬ tional House beat the Penguins, Achilles andthe Heels edged the Blue Star Vorwaerts,and the Saudi Union Movement snuck by 6Stars, 3 Bars and a Ball. Since the Saudisare most likely to take the graduate champi¬onship now that Giordano’s is out of the pic¬ture, I have slipped them back up to thenumber one spot.In the Psi Upsilon-Mildred rematch onSunday, a forty-minute brawl was interrupt¬ed sporadically by a few people on eachteam who wanted to play soccer. Someplayers on the Psi U team apparentlythought they had come for intramural wres¬tling.As one referee wrote on his scoreboard,“feet and fists were thrown in a minor alter¬cation which ensued after the final whistle.”It’s true that the referees never had con¬trol of the proceedings, but this fact hardlyexcuses the combattants’ conduct. Most ofthe problem was in fact caused by an incred¬ibly antagonistic spectator, whose ego wasbruised by a much-deserved derogatory re¬mark from the field early in the game. Muchof the credit for post-game brawling, howev¬er, must also go to a certain Psi U fullbackwho has an ever-present chip on hisshoulder the size of Rockefeller Chapel. Heknows who he is.Psi U’s antics during and after the gamewere not enough to keep the clearly superiorMildred team from winning 1-0. Both teamswere given ludicrous sportsmanship ratingsof 3 out of a possible 5. If sportsmanship re¬ally counted for anything, one of the teamswould be through for the season and theother given the sternest of warnings.The Ark Royal team Sunday legitimatedits title as leader of the independent red divi¬sion by beating Amalgamation again, thistime in good weather. Ark Royal goalieMike Gelfman had a fantastic game, stop¬ping shot after shot by Amalgamation in thefinal minutes of the contest. His play openedthe way for the Ark Royal scoring team ofDan Dobbins and Harry Douglas, who com¬bined their efforts to slam home the game-winner in the final minute.Continued on page 12 he faced to retire the side.The Maroons took the game into their ownhands with three more runs in the top half ofthe final inning and they scored them allwith two outs already on the scoreboard.Catcher Matt Koenig walked but wasthrown out at second on Dickey’s single, andDickey was forced out at second, on Janko-vich’s single. But then Saliman was hit byrelief pitcher Barroon’s fastball and Gernonsingled Ashbum’s walk forced in Janko¬vich. Lewis then ripped a single to centerfield to score two more runs, and Medinagrounded out to second. The Maroons had aseemingly sure victory with their three-runlead and three outs left in the game.The first Tiger batter, however, homeredto left field and Maley gave up three morehits as the Tigers eked out a 11-10 victory.The second half of the double-header wasas disappointing as the first. The Maroonsheld the lead through the top of the sixth in¬ning, but again faltered in the late going.Lewis walked, as did three more Maroons,in the first inning. He scored when Gernonwalked but Dickey’s ground out to third leftthe bases loaded with only a one run lead.The first Tiger batter in the first inning hitthe first of three homers against pitcherSteve Barnhart. The heavy wind wreakedhavoc on the Maroon pitchers all day long.Barnhart fanned the second batter but gaveup another homer to the next Tiger. He re¬tired the side with two ground outs.The Maroon’s Greg Williams singled inthe second inning but got no help from histeammates. The Tigers scored two moreruns in the second inning but Jankovich,Werner, Weber, and W’illiams led theMaroons in a three-run burst in the third.The Tigers answered with a lone run in thefourth when catcher Hermann homered toleft field. Barnhart allowed two more walksbut finished the side when he struck out thelast Tiger batter.Neither team scored in the fifth inning,but the Maroons again seemed to takecharge of the game in the sixth as theyscored two runs. Lewis extended his hittingstreak to eleven games with a triple. Hescored on Medina’s single, and Medinascored on Koenig’s single to center field.Werner grounded out to second base to endthe inning but the Maroons led 6-5 going intothe bottom of the sixth.Abnet scored nine runs on four hits andfour walks to win the second game andsweep the doublheader Larson relievedBarnhart after he walked the first batterand Chris Rayl came on for Larson afterfour Tiger batters The Maroons literallythrew their second game away.The team’s record now stands at 2-17. Onebright spot, however, is the spectacular sea¬son-long performance of center fielderLewis. His team-high batting average of490, his slugg.ng average of .612, and four¬teen stolen bases in fifteen attempts madehim a strong All-Conference candidate.The Maroons finish the season today atStagg Field against George Williams.PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANWoodward war: Lower Flint (light shirt) versus LowerRickertm«o*T*l«C*E:The Textbook Department of theUniversity of Chicago Bookstorewill be dosed on Friday, May 13,1983 for annual inventory.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983—11Sports Hither and YonIMsocimContinued from page 11Ark Royal's glory was cut short, however,by the potent Psi U offense in a game yester¬day. It was the Ark’s second loss this seasonagainst Psi U.Psi U will advance again to take a thirdand probably final crack at Mildred tomor¬row. The players on Mildred were unani¬mous in their desire not to play Psi U again.After Psi U’s behavior in the last game, whocan blame them?In women’s playoff action, a game be¬tween Snell and Compton was left undecidedafter a controversial shootout. A Snell cap¬tain contended that one of Snell’s shooterswas interfered with during her shot; the en¬tire shootout will be replayed at an undeter¬mined date. The eventual winner will meetLower Flint in the women’s residencefinal.Scrubbing Bubbles, long the independentwomen’s favorite, was eliminating yester¬day by Nantes-Outre-Mer. The only inde¬pendent teams remaining are N-O-M,Crown Rats-II and Borborygmi. The Ratsremain overall favorites.Men’s residence favorite Henderson Awas also eliminated over the weekend. A te¬nacious Chamberlin defense held Hender¬son to one goal, and Chamberlin’s offensemanaged to combine for two.The only teams still alive in residenceplayoffs are Lower Flint, Hitchcock A,Compton and Chamberlin.Lower Flint, despite the efforts of Hitch¬cock forward Andy MacLachlan, will al¬most certainly advance past Hitchcock tothe residence final.The other residence semifinal, Comptonvs. Chamberlin, is harder to call. Compton’stalent is better spread throughout the team,but Chamberlin seems to want to win verybadly. Give the edge to Compton for itsshooters Drews Demakas, Andy Wrobel andThai Tron.Both residence semifinals will be playedtomorrow. SOCIM RankingsGraduate Men1. Saudi Union Movement*2. Gertie’s3. Giordano’s4. Internationa] House5. 6 Stars, 3 Bars and a BallHonorable Mention: Achilles and the Heels,Blue Star VorwaertsUndergraduate Men1. Mildred2. Psi Upsilon3. Lower Flint4. Ark Royal5. Amalgamation6. Compton7. Chamberlin8.Henderson A9.Hitchcock A10.Lower RickertHon. Men.: VincentWomen1. Crown Rats-II2. Compton3. Snell4. Borborygmi5. DudleyHon. Men.: Scrubbing Bubbles, Nantes-Outre-Mer, Lower Flint*A11-University No. 1~s(xmw&yoirGraduate MaiSaudi Union Movement 2 .Gertie’s 3International House 3Achilles and the Heels 2.... .Blue Star Vorwaerts lUndergraduate MenHitchcock A3Compton 2Chamberlin 2Lower Rickert 2 ..Chamberlin 2Lower Flint 31 Compton 4Hitchcock AMildred 1Ark Royal 3Psi Upsilon 4WomenBreckinridge 2Nantes-Outre-Mar 3Scrubbing Bubbles 2. 1750 Club 0Lower Flint 1 ..... Breckinridge 0 SG WatergateThe U of C SG could take a few lessonsfrom the Student Government Associationat the University of Alabama. Less than amonth after SGA elections, a telephone tapwas removed from the home of the SGAPresident, and according to a neighbor thetap had been in place since before theelections. A sweep of the SGA officeproduced no more taps, and the UniversityPolice were investigating the matter.Guardian WildcatsThirty-five Northwestern Universitystudents received their “wings” — anoffical T-shirt and red beret — as theyprepared for their first patrol as GuardianAngels, after successfully completing atraining program. The Angels will patrolNU campus and parts of Evanston ingroups of eight.Course on the rocksThe University of Pennsylvania orderedthe Penn Student Agencies to cancel abartending instruction course, citing thefact that it makes alcohol available tominors and fears that participants wouldbecome intoxicated and unmanageable asreasons for the ban. The classaccommodates about 400 students eachyear, and an estimated 25% of Pennstudents take the course during theircollege days. The PSA contends that theclass is well supervised and has had noproblems, and complained because theywere not consulted when theadministration made their decision.NU DRUGSCAMSome Northwestern students werevictims of a drug scam in which they paidan unidentified male $160 for what turnedout to be a bag of flour. The suspect, aman in his 20s, apparently cased theinterior of a dormitory, before findingsome students who were willing to buy drugs. The man then gave the studentsseveral lines of cocaine, and aftersampling the students agreed to pay $160for a large amount of marijuana. The manleft the students with some whitesubstance that they thought was morecocaine, but turned out to be flour. Theyreported the incident to the RA, who inturn reported it to the school’s Departmentof Public Safety. An NU official expressedconcern that someone who was not astudent was walking around in adormitory, and warned NU students not to“be so trusting” when engaging in casualdrug deals.Pluses and minusesA proposal is before the Council onAcademic Affairs at Eastern IllinoisUniversity that would allow plus andminus grades to be granted toundergraduates. The author of theproposal said that borderline studentswould receive fairer grades and the gradeswould give a “better prespective” of whatstudents learn in classes. Wright also saidthat professors would be forced “toestablish more rigorous standards” forgrading, and cited the examples ofstudents who received grades of B-I-, C+,D+, A, and B+, and B-, C-, D-, A, and B-.Under the present system both receive aGPA of 2.375; under the proposed systemthe former would receive a 2.638 and thelatter would receive a 2.075.CorrectionIn last Friday’s Maroon, a viewpoint byMichael Griffin appeared concerning thearms race. In that article, a sentence read“A moderately capable ABM system, say 50percent effective, would significantly attackagainst its nuclear weapons.” The sentenceshould have read, “A moderately capableABM system, say 50 percent effective,would significantly reduce the other side’sability to retaliate after a massive counter¬force attack against its nuclear weapons.”The Maroon regrets the error.Campus Films CalendarGunn (Blake Edwards, 1967) Edwards resu¬scitates his television detective character inthis violent detective story. Stars Craig Ste¬vens, Laura Devon and Ed Asner. Tues.,May 10 at 8 p.m. Doc. $2.Bunny Lake is Missing (Otto Preminger,1965) Ann Lake (Carol Lynley) arrives inEngland and when she goes to pick up herdaughter after the first day of school, shefinds out Bunny Lake is missing. Indeedwhen Ann goes home, she finds that all ofBunny’s things are missing. Inspector Ne-whouse (Laurence Olivier) finds out thatAnn had an imaginary friend as a child, alsonamed Bunny, and he begins to suspect thatBunny never existed. Wed., May 11 at 8 p.m.Doc. $2.The Road to Morocco (David Butler, 1942)Bing Crosby and Bob Hope are shipwreckedand washed up on the shores of Morocco,where Crobsy, always the opportunist, sells Hope into slavery to make a little moneyand to get into the palace and establish use¬ful contacts. Also stars Dorothy Lamour.Wed., May 11 at 8:30 p.m. LSF. $2.Desk Set (Walter Lang, 1957) KatherineHepburn plays the head of television ne¬twork’s reference and research departmentwho combats a stern efficiency expert(Spencer Tracy), hired to replace her girlswith an electric brain. Thurs., May 12 at8:30 p.m. LSF. $2.Black Orpheus (Marcel Camus. 1959) Thisfilm is the story of two young lovers living inthe slums of Rio de Janeiro. Thurs., May 12at 7:30 p.m. I-House Talking Pictures. $2.One Day I Asked (Julia Alverez, 1970) Thisdocumentary focuses on the religious alien-aton of exploited people who look for a mira¬cle as the solution to their daily problems.Thurs., May 12 at 8 p.m. Doc. $2. TUESDAYU.C. Baseball: U.C. vs. George Williams College 3p.m. Stagg FieldDOC: Gunn 8 p.m. $1.50Advanced Genetics: Barbara McClintock, CarnegieInstitution, “Why Transposable Elements In MaizeAre Called Controlling Elements’’ 2 p.m. CLSC101Raquetball Club: 6:30-close HCFH courts 3 + 4CCP: Summer Jobs Information Workshop, noon,Rm 200, Reynolds Club.Tea Time Lecture: Kari Moe, Research Director forWashington Campaign, and Raul Hinojosa, IssuesCoordinator same, on "The Campaign of HaroldWashington: A Look at the Coalition and theIssues” 4 p.m. Wilder House 5811 S. Kenwood.Sponsored by the Center for the Study of IndustrialSocieties.Comm, on Virology Herpes Series: Patricia Spear on“Herpes Simplex Virus Glycoproteins: The Genes,the Products and Their Effecta on Infected Cell Sur¬faces” 1-2 p.m. CLSC 1117Persian Circle: IRAN Re-veiled — three short colordocumentary films narrated in English 3:30-4:30p.m. Abbott 133Music Dept.: Noontime Recital: Elizabeth Weber,soprano; Evangeline Mendoza Bourgeois, harpsi-cord and piano. Works of Handel and Schuman. 12p.m. Goodspeed recital hall. FREET’ai Chi: classes led by Master Wu 8-10 p.m. 3rd fl.INH. 752-7460; 288-7113.WEDNESDAYLSF: The Road to Morrocco 8:30 p.m. Law Sch. Aud.$2.DOC: Bunny Lake is Missing 8 p.m. Cobb $1.50P.O.C. Public Lecture: Theda Skocpol and SamPeltzman on “The Rise of Government Regulationin the U S. Economy” 1:30 p.m. SS 122Center for Middle Eastern Studies Midwest FacultySeminar: The Problem of ‘Other’: Frames works forInterpreting History & Culture in a Multi-CenteredWorld”a combination of presentations and discus¬sions. Info call Michael Ditchkofsky at 962-1725.Seminar in Judd thru May 14Hillel: Student for Israel Jerusalem day films: Andof the 7th Day and Jerusalem: City of Peace 8 p.m.Biochem. Dept.: Dr. Bruce M. Alberts, U. of Cal.,San Francisco, “Mechanism and Enzymology ofDNA replication” 4 p.m. CLSC 101Calvert House: Rev. Joseph J. Spae, China Mission¬ary and Vatican consultant, on "The Condition ofthe Christian Churches in China Today” 7 p.m. 5735S. University Badminton Club: 7:30-10 p.m. INH GymCCP Panel Discussion: “Conversations with Gradu¬ate Student Interns: Graduate Study and CareerPreparation” 5-6:30 p.m. Reynolds Club 201. Re¬freshments.Muslim Studies Comm. & South Asian Studies:Tayyab Siddiqui, Political Counsel, Embassy of Pa¬kistan, on "Russians in Afghanistan: The Optionsfor Pakistan” 4 p.m. Foster 103Rockefeller Chapel: Service of Holy Communion fol¬lowed by Breakfast 8 a m.Art Dept.: Ellen Johnson, Oberlin College, on "Re¬ality in Abstraction: Five Contemporary Sculptors,7 p.m. Cochrane Woods Art Center, Rm 157THURSDAYBlackfrairs: Bye Bye Birdie 8 p.m. 1st Floor Reyn¬olds Club Theatre $3.50Hillel: Faculty Luncheon, John Pawlikowski on“Jewish-Christian Relations in the Light of the Warin Lebonon" 12 p.m. $3 RSVP 752-1127Noontime Concert: Jay Roseblatt, piano, Liszt se¬lections 12:15 p.m. Goodspeed hall FREEFOTA: Opening day on the Quads. See ads!!!Talking Pictures: Black Orpheus 7:30 p.m. I-House$2 free popcornLSF: Desk Set 8:30 p.m. Law School $2DOC: One Day I Asked & Death of a Bureaucrat 8p.m. Cobb $2Women’s Union: Seminar 7 p.m. INHRockefeller Chapel: Choral Vespers 5:15 p.m.Comm. On Virology Herpes Series: Carol Lopez,Sloan Kettering Institute, on “Immunobiology ofHerpes Simplex Virus Infections” 1-2 p.m. CLSC1117.Brown Bag Lecture: Manuel A. Garreton, FiascoChile, on "Evolution and Crisis and the Problem ofDemocratization in Military Regimes: Notes fromthe Chilean Case” 12-2 p.m. Wilder House 5811 S.Kenwood. Sponsored by the Center for the Study ofIndustrial Societies.Comm, on Genetics: Alfonso Martinez-Arias on “AEukaryotic Control Element As Seen Through AProkaryotic Coding Region” 1:15 p.m. Zo 14Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: James Sire on“Why Should Anyone Believe Anything Aut All?”7:30 p.m. I-HousePhysics Dept.: Walter E. Massey, Argonne & U.C.,on “Overview of Research at Argonne” 4:30 p mEck 133Brent House: Episcopal Eucharist, Noon BondChapelU of C Democrats: Regular meeting and general elec¬tion, 7:30 p.m. Cobb 103.THE GRADUATE INTERN PROGRAMinvites registered graduatestudents to attend apanel discussionConversations with GraduateStudent Interns: GraduateStudy and Career PreparationWednesday, May 11, 19835-6:30 p.m.Reynolds Club 201-Refreshments-Office of Career Counseling and Placement12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday,, May IO, 1983EXPERT MECHANICAL SERVICEFOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARSTUNE-UP • BRAKE JOBS • ELECTRICALSHOCK ABSORBERS • OIL CHANGES • LUBESBATTERIES • MUFFLERS • AIR CONDITIONINGENCLOSED, SECURE, AND REASONABLY PRICEDPARKING FACILITIES — AN ALTERNATIVE TOPARKING ON THE STREETS THIS WINTERHYDE PARK GARAGE5508 SOUTH LAKE PARK • 241-622010% DISCOUNT ON MECHANICAL WORKWITH THIS COUPONPICK UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLEThe Muslim Studies Committee and The Committeeon Southern Asian Studies present a LectureRUSSIANS IN AFGHANISTAN: THE OPTIONSFOR PAKISTANbyTAYYAB SIDDIQUI,Political Counsel, Embassy of PakistanWednesday, May 11th4:00 p.m.South Asia Commons - Foster 103 THE HEDW1G L. LOEBFELLOWSHIPFOR UNDERGRADUATERESEARCH IN THE COLLEGEThe Hedwig L. Loeb Fellowship, established in1977 to support undergraduate research, is ac-cepting research proposals for the Summer andAutumn Quarters of 1983. Proposals should besubmitted to the Associate Dean of the Collegein Harper 241, by Friday, May 20, 1983.Proposals must contain a description of the pro¬ject and research method, an estimated budgetindicating the quarter it is to be used, and a letterevaluating the proposal from a member of theFaculty.For research that requires use of a Universityfacility (e.g. laboratory), a letter agreeing to thisuse must be submitted by an appropriate memberof the Faculty.Modest funds are available to the College to sup¬port undergraduate research. Award size will bedependent upon the nature, number and qualityof proposals.Is *10,000enough incentive tocall 876-4308?Of course it is. Especially if it couldamount to a student loan from Sears Bank.Which is the whole idea for callingus at 876-4308.You see, we're offering loansthrough the Illinois Guaranteed StudentLoan Program. And you can get one allthe way up to $25,000, depending on your educational program.You're eligible if you have a per¬manent residence in the Chicago area.And you don't even need an ac¬count with Sears Bank to qualify.So if you need money for your edu¬cation, isn't $10,000 worth the priceof a phone call?Sears Bank and TrustStudent LoansSears Tower Chicago, IL 60606198 * Sears Bank and Trust A wholly owned subsidiary ot Midland Bancorp Ini Member FT) 1C.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983—13Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publication. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACEHyde Park Studio Apts 245.00 clean quietbuilding newly decorated 4- carpeted stove 4-refrig laundry facilities 24 hour manager 5140S. Woodlawn 493-62503 bedroom condominiums for sale 55th streetand Everett. Call 357-7926 evenings 979-6091days.Professors apartment. One block from campusfully furnished. Available June 10 684 1820.Looking for housing? Check InternationalHouse, for grad, students and for scholarsvisifing Chicago. 753-2270, 2280.LOVELY 2bdrm furn summer sblt, lake/loopview $438 util incl 324-2273 Bill/Lynn evenings.Female roommate to share 3 bdrm. apt. w/2others. Prefer grad or working non smokers.$177/mo. 53rd & Harper 241-6380 eves.Condo, 56th & Kimbark, 2BDRM, Eat-in Kit¬chen Full Dr -f Pantry, Safe, Sunny CourtYard Building Pleasant Views, $66,000 Call 876-3512 Days57th AND KENWOOD: large beautiful 2 BRCONDO FOR SALE by owners, oak floors,woodbning frplc, mod kit & bath, bkyd, acrossfrom park, call 752-7147 eves., 962 8822 days.ONE bdrm $295. studio $235. Quiet bldg on UCbus rt 5210 Woodlawn. Laundry/some utilitiesincluded. Decorated. 684-5030 bet 8:30a./evesSummer Sublet - Large Studio; Furn; 6/30-9/11; 50th Cornell; rent negot; 947-0577 after 7p.m.Three bedroom apt call 324 6914 avbl. June 1and share four bedroom apt. call 955 0887 or324 6914.Summer sblt 3 bdrms in triplex condo $175 perbdrm frnshd wash/dry dshwshr 363-7923 Ben/-Jim.3 bedrm & studios avail, in the near future.Near U of C Grad. stud. pref. 238-7941.TIMESAVERSThe Communication ProfessionalsDocument Preparation, Manuscripts,Theses, Term Papers,Word Processing & IBM Selectrics"Your Deadline Is Our Timetable"470-02315234 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-020014—'The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, SUMMER SUBLET faculty 2 bedrm apt, 3 minwalk to campus, furnished, available 1 June to1 Sept $430/mo incl util4-parking space. 324-4329 even56/Kimbark, 3’/2 Rm Occ. 7/1 380/Mo. 2’/2 RmOcc. 6/1 320/mo. Call 539-0304.Studio sublet: June Ist/fall option $215 in¬clusive, Kenwood & 56th, laundry, 955-2724.Short-Term Rental, May-Aug. Hse-excel. con¬dition close to U/C. Mod kit, 2 bths, prkng,yard. 1 or 2 adults. Lite carpeting. 400/mo. 301-730-4627 evesLarge Vintage Three Bedroom Two-bath Apt.WBF Balcony 643-4253.Roommate wanted 56 4- Kimbark $240/mo utilincl own room in secure quiet condo bldg nonsmoking female preferred 752-2749 eves 732-6676 days.Available NOW: 1 br in a 2 br COACH HOUSE.Prime location: 57th & Woodlawn. Sunny, safe,picturesque. Thur Oct. 1. Lisa: 947-8420.SUMMER SUBLET: one room in co-ed house.Large comfortable, lake view. On B bus route$180/mo 4- utilities. 241-7589.FOR RENT Spacious 2 bdrm apt at 53rd &Harper. Porch over ctyrd. Rent around500/mo. Incl ht & hw. Avail Aug 1. Call Davidat 947-8276.2 rms in clean, spacious apt. w/sunporch 2baths & laundry in kitchen. $160 & 225/mo. plusutilities. Share w/2 women 4- cat. Grad orundergrad female pref. Available June 15: 955-9635 Ps: On D bus route near shopping.Summer sublet 2bedrm. nicely turnished aptrent neg parking incl. mid-je to mid-sept, call667 4476 for more info. A great superdeal.One Month Rent Free! Summer Sublet 1Bedrm of 3 Bedrm Apt 20th FI Regents ParkFall Option on Entire Apt AC Dishwasher CallDave 241-5759.SUMMER SUBLET female graduate stud, toshare 3 bdrm. furn. apt. $l77.00/mo4-utilities56th-4 Univ. Mid June-Mid Sept. 643-2454.SUBLET June 1 - September 1 (neg) $450 2Bedroom furnished with a lot of extras:Dishwasher, Rnas Stereo Call 955-6725.Sublet with option 1 br in 3 br coachhouse niceyard, porch. Close to Mr G's share with 2 ferngrads 4- 1 dog $185 4- util avail June 1 Call Kim962 6237, Kim or Ruth 324-7406.Roommate needed for Ig rm in sunny plantfilled 3-bdrm. Non smoking fern, grad or work¬ing person pref. $215.00 including heat. 947-1856M-F, 10-5; 684-1388UNBEATABLE LOCATION: 2 frnshd rms in 3bdrm APT 56th & University; 189/mo CALL947-0747(349)2 rms in 4br 4ba at 55/Lake. Spacious, secure;sunporch, lakeview; nr trnsprt & shppng. $210.Summer. 753-0085,-0156 after 7pm.CLOSE TO CAMPUS, look for third femaleroommate to share with two others in large 3bedroom apartment. June 15-June 15 leasewith HEAT INCLUDED. Contact Dina or leavemessage at 753 8342 Room 1015SUMMER SUBLET: female nonsmoker,$200/month, furnished rm in 2 br apt. Modern,air-cond., secure bldg. S. Lake Shore 4- HydePark. Call: 324-3917 9-11 a.m. or evenings.APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Large2 Vi,4 St 6 rm.apts.OccupancyBU8-55661983 SUMMER SUBLET or 1 year lease; furnishedfor summer; avail 6/11; 2 bedroom, 2 bath;A/C; 24hr doorman; exercise room; modernkitchen incl. dishwasher; close to lake, Jeffrey4-1C; Rent: 1 yr: $634/mo.; summer: verynegotiable. 5020 S. Lake Shore. 241-7315.$100 Reward. Sublet this Apartment and wewill pay you $100 up front. 1715 E 55th St. Verylarge, 1 bdrm apt. Close to lake, 1C, Coop. Freeheat, low utility costs. $400/mo. 861-2481 (day)482-9635 (after 6:30)SPACE WAN TEDProf, on sabbatical 4- wife looking for furnhouse/apt fall 83/fall 84 call Ms. de Erdman670-0240 days/752-0281 nights.Responsible Yale senior, Lab School grad,wants to house-sit Hyde Park June 1-Aug 31.Will tend plants and garden. Debbie Schwartz,203-789 1612or 312-752-1175.Young professional couple (in medicine) seekshouse-sitting position in Hyde Park for thesummer. Call Maxine Barish 955-0321.Unfurnished 2 bdrm apt in East H.P. wantedfor July 1. Call Ann at 955-8515.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700."Teargas" mace aerosal. Send for freecatalogue. Good protection against muggersand assaults. Write to: Smith, P.O. Box 17345,Chicago, IL 60617.The Divinity School Association BOOKSALEwill be held Thursday, May 12 and Friday, May13, from 9:00 - 3:30. 50% to 90% off on newbooks, plus hundreds of used books. Fiction,religious studies, history, philosophy, etc.Swift Commons, 1025 E. 58th Street.Raw wood shelves and cinder blocks for salecall 752-1014.OLYMPUS XA with Flash $159.95NIKON Lens Sale! Save Up to $40.00on Select Items....MODE L CAMERA 1342 E 55th St. 493-6700TDK SA90 Tapes 10 tor $29.90!!SONY UCXS90 Reference Standard Tapes10 for $34.90!!MODEL CAMERA 1342 E 55th St. 493 6700PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processingResearch conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communication, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962 8859 AfternoonsRIGHT HANDED SUBJECTS wanted forresearch on preception/brain functioning.$3/hr.962-8846.Wanted: persons with good writing skills plusbackground in finance or business to abstractJournal/Newspaper articles for financialtrade assoc. Please call: Sue Martin-782-1442.AFTER SCHOOL SITTER for 7 + 11 yrd. old.Mon. thru Thurs. Call 241 6361.A 24 year old good looking university studentmust go to St. Louis for two weeks to Masters-Johnson for SEXUAL THERAPY. He needs anaccompaning female partner. Time, expenseswill be paid. Write P.O. Box 1541 Skokie, Il¬linois 60076.Sitter for 7-yr old boy, 2 hrs. weekday aft.through summer. Call 684-1785 evenings.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417. JAMES BONE, EDITOR-Typist, 363 0522.PROFESSIONAL TYPING, Reasonable 6846882.Passport photos while you wait. On campus.Other services available. 962-6263.DINNER PARTIES Prepared and Presentedin your home. Mary Kenny Hanessian Catering493 7351I CLEAN apts., houses, etc. $5.50/hr. Verythorough, experienced. I don't need to staylong. 684-5835. DaveCREATIVE CARPENTRY-Local work in¬cludes custom kitchen cabinets, generalremodeling, and the Phoenix Book Store. CallDavid Loehr, 684-2286.If it's bothering you in any way, then it's important enough for you to call the line. We arehere for you. Dial 753-1777 from 7pm to 7amand we'll try our best to help.Typing - fast, friendly, accurate. Specialty:resumes 4- late papers. P-up 4- del. 924-4449.SCENESSiddah Yogs Meditation Center of Hyde Parklearn to meditate * Sunday at 4 * always free5136 South Greenwood 955-2345NEW-THE TERRIFIC TEMPEH BURGER Afirm soy rice patty simmered in our specialseasoned sauce then served on a toasted frenchroll with alfalfa sprouts. Only 2.15 for a fillinglunch at the BLUE GARGOYLE. 5655 So.University. Kitty corner from Reynolds Clubm-F 11:00AM-2:00PMRelive your early years! See Bye Bye Birdie!Tonight and Sat. 8 pm Reynolds Club.We love you Conrad, oh yes we do! You willlove Bye Bye Birdie! Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8 pm.PIZZA every Friday at the BLUEGARGOYLE. Full take out service available.5655 So. University. Open M-F 11:00AM2.00PM 1 blk east of Regenstein.Les Beaux Parleurs discuteront des aspects dela culture francaise avec un Francais. Jeudi,20hl5m, INH. Rafraichissements. Venez Nornbreux! Details: telephonez Lesa a 753 2249#1325 SGFCLOST AND FOUNDLOST ■ Black lab/mut 1 yr old lost Springbreakplease call Geoff 947 0021.Lost: Prescription bifocal sunglasses. Darkframes, in black padded pocket-clip Sosimcase. Reward for return. Call 962 8806 or 288-1538.PERSONALSIs the LAYner cake at the Bakery mighty tastylately?Hope you had a Happy Birthday!!Love, Bunny.PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIOPortraits, Weddings, andl Special Events arenow being booked by Hyde Park's newest portrait studio. Call and speak with Ron Milewskiat The Better Image.1344 E. 55th St. 643-6262STEPTUTORINGHelp a child feel bright and intelligentVolunteer to tutor elementary and high schoolstudents, spring and/or summer qtr. contactMike (eve) at 241-6394 for more information.LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRYAugustono Lutheran Church5500 S. Woodlawn Ave.Tues., 5:30 p.m. — Eucharist6:00 p.m. — Pizza Supper ($2/person)/DiscussionNO SPEAKER THIS WEEKNext Week. 'The University & Public Virtue”Paul E. Peterson. Dept, of Political ScienceThurs., 7:30 a.m. — Morning Prayer and BreakfastClassified AdsTHE YEARBOOK IS HERE rfdLIGHTThe Yearbook is here and on sale around cam¬pus for a mere S15. Buy it in the SAO office(Rm. 210 Ida Noyes Hall: checks only please.)tVRITiw^ DJ-ing, lights, and other services available.7 ... I U I ORS Call 241 6438 for info and rates.PRODUCTION*available to make Your next party a SuccessPositions available to students in Phd pro¬grams in all divisions. 10-12 hrs/wk, salary 650750/qtr. Further info and applications atHarper 241.FREE SHOW! GO, GRETCHEN!!Congrats on All-American.We knew it!!!!The Fan Club...all you have to do is usher at Bye Bye Birdie!May 5-7 & 12-14. Call Margo (670-3030 days on¬ly) to participate. KUNG-FU ANDTAI CHI4800 S. LAKE SHORE1 bedrm. condo in Newport. Yr round pool,health club, full security. Anxious owner ask¬ing $46,900.Call Marc Glixon We have OthersAde Realty, Inc. 641-0159USHERSNEEDEDfor Bye Bye Birdie May 5-7 & 12-14. Call Margo(670-3030 days only) for details. The Hyde Park Kung-Fu Club - Young People'sDivision is offering classes of Northern ShaolinKung-Fu and Yang Family Tai Chi Ch'uan foryoung people 4 to 14 years old. Classes meetFridays at 6:15 pm and Sundays at 5:00 pm at4945 S. Dorchester (enter on 50th St.), $15.00per month. Or Saturdays, 218 S. Wabash (3rdFI) at 1:30 pm. $15.00 per month. Come by orphone 842-7076 for more information. Alsoadult classes Wednesday at the Blue Gargoyle5655 S. University. Kung-Fu at 6:30pm Tai ChiCh'uan 7:30pm.ORIENTATIONAIDES 1983-84Remember how confused you were when youcame to the College? So put some of your vastknowledge and experience to good use.Genera! Orientation Aide applications for the1983-84 academic year are available in Harper264. All applications are due May 17. Questions? Call 962 8620.WINDEMERE SUBLET3 Bdrm; 2</2 ba: turn; mod kitch-dwshr; laundry on ea fir; 24 hr doorman; 2 blocks fr lake;parking w guard. Avail June 5-Sept 20. $200-250/rm, negotiable. Call Rich: 955-9121.SAILING CLUBOrganizational meeting for old and newmembers 5/12 at 8:00 in main lounge IdaNoyes. Next meeting 5/25. GRADUATE INTERNPROGRAMRegistered graduate students are invited to apanel discussion: "Conversations withGraduate Student Interns: Graduate Studyand Career Preparation," on Wednesday, May11, from 5 to 6:30 p.m. in Reynolds Club 201.Refreshments served.ALERT FORCEYou lob a gas grenade as the armor car runsthrough the fence. There, ten yards away, is anuclear bomb. This is ALERT FORCE, asimulated terrorist attack on SAC airbase.How many planes can you destroy? Can youget the bomb? Or can you stop it? New fromClose Simulations: 112 cut counters, 12" x 14”map, 16 page illustrated rule book with 9scenarios, a zip lock bag, all in a handsomebox. $5 plus 50' postage (III. residents add 30tax) to CLOSE SIMULATIONS P.O. Box 2247Dept. P, Northbrook, 11.60062SELL YOUR STUFFSign up now to sell at Ida Noyes Flea Market $2reserves a space for students Flea Date 5/2110am 4pm call 962-9554SOPHOMORES ANDJUNIORSSophomores and juniors interested in graduatebusiness, accounting and legal educationwanted by major Professional Publisher to becampus representative for '83-'84 school year.Good income potential for little time investment. For more information call Debbie at 855-1088.UNIV PARK FOR RENTStudio top floor north vu drapes/carpets $355w/heat + wtr can furnish Tom. 962-1210 9631398 Avail June 15RECREATIONAL LAND120 acres. S W Wisconsin. 4Vi hrs. from Chic.Several springs. 13000. Cedar-sidedMobilhome. $75,000. Call eves. 752 7205$$RESEARCH SUBJECTSSSWe pay $123 for your participation in a 6 weekdrug preterence study. Involves onlycommonly prescribed, non-experimentaldrugs, and requires minimal time. If you arebetween 21 and 35 and in good health, call 962-1536 or 962-1537 for further information.P Ugly DucklingL4 RENT-A-CAR1608 E. 53rd St. 667-2800(Between 1C Tracks & Cornell)IntroducesWEEKDAY SPECIALSMon-Thurs J10.95/Day50 total miles free!!WEEKEND SPECIALSFri-Sat-Sun M 7.50/Day200 total miles free 11 NIGHTin the South Atlantic...the Captain of theBelgrano looks over the horizon as they steamtowards the British Exclusion Zone. Suddenlytwo blasts shake the ship, there's fire andchaos. All is out of control. This is theFALKLAND'S WAR. Not some cheap quickiedesign but an acual simulation of the battlebased on information from a participant.Every plane, ship, troop, and mode of combatare realistically represented in an accessibleform. Also: A large three color map, over 100counters, charts, rules, and player's notes allin an attractive bookshelf box. A year later thebattle for the wind-swept islands is on again!CLOSE SIMULATIONS, Dept. P, P.O. Box2247 Northbrook, III. 60062 $14 plus $1 postage(III. residents add 84' for Caesar).UC DANCE CLUB &JANSDANCESINMANDELL HALLFOf A brings DANCE to this campus, May 15,Sun. 8:30pm. tix at Reynolds Club Tix Center,only $1 for UC students.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. 1(M Ql.J!C!(-r Inge red?Try your hand at BLITZ CHESS - 5 minutes perperson per ^ame. Annuai Speed TPLTP?-ment Ida Noyes, 7:30pm Monday. Cash prizes.Sections for all levels, including beginners'section. Bring a chess clock if you can. Elec¬tion of club officers will follow the tournament.GERMAN TRANSLATOROne Time Paying Opportunity For Fluent In¬dividual with technical background(Chemistry document) call Kevin 226-3179EveningsGREEN EGGS & HAMATTHE PUBGreen Eggs & Ham-Bluegrass band at thePUB May 12 10-12 PUB membership required.Only $2 available at door. 21yrs & olderw/UCID.FINGER-pickin Barry Brogan joins The Mystery Triofor a night of Blues and Folk music at the BlueGargoyle, Thursday May 12 Show starts 9PMBG at 57 And Univ Admission still only $1.GYMNASTICS CLUBDEMONSTRATIONon the quads-Fri. May 13. Another FOTAevent!FOTA-FOTA-FOTAGET OUT OF THE DAMN LIBRARY-FOTAstarts May 12PHOTO FOTAWORKSHOPSB&W PHOTOGRAPHY workshops. Learn HowTo Use YOUR Camera. Sun May 15, 7 9pm IdaNoyes rm #218OUR NEW #962-9555MAROON FOTA IS HEREBringing you CHEER! Opening day-on thewumuo* i nur.i U.I AM FREE 8,I AM AN ANIMALbe primitive, DUMB RA in the PUB. May 1410pm- Pub membership required AnotherFOTA event!FOTA BRINGSDUMB RADUMB RA in the Pub-Sat. May 14-10pm. Pubmembership required.AMERICAN SQUARE &INTERNATIONALFOLK DANCE PARTYSUN. May 15-IDA NOYES parking lot: 2-6pmsponsored by FOTA & FOLK DANCERSGREEN EGGS & HAMATTHE PUBGreenEggs & Ham-Bluegrass band at the PUBMay 12 10-12 PUB membership required. Only$2 available at door. 21yrs & older w/UCID.HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Church School (all ages) 9:45 a.m.Worship Nursery Provided 11:00 a.m.W. Kenneth Williams. MinisterSusan Johnson. Baptist Campus MinisterCome, Worship, Study, Serve— PERSONAL COMPUTERS-—Sales, Education, Service,Computers, printers, modems and supplies.AUTHORIZED KAYPRO DEALERVALUE ADDED SYSTEMS1701 E. 53rd Street 752-7362CAN YOUR CARMAKE IT HOME?BEFORE YOU LEAVE, MAKE SURE YOU CAN GETWHERE YOU’RE GOING WITH A QUICK CHECK-UPAT RUBY CHEVROLET/VOLKSWAGEN!pi GM QUALITYSSMCE PARTSGENERAL MOTOCS BASTS DIVISIONjfrrrrrrt i rrnrrrrrrrrrrnnrrrrmnmrmrPRESENT THIS COUPON AND YOURSTUDENT OR FACULTY I.D. AND GET10%“FF110(TON ANY ON ANYSERVICE OR NEW ORVISIT! USED CAR!'uaim>ti.u.u.iLU 11 t.«juu t uui«»> uuuCHEVROLET/VOLKSWAGEN7234 STONY ISLAND• 684-0400The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, May 10, 1983—15THURSDAY-May19 ModernPlaysinFrench&.SpanishSeresof sketchesbyFrenchplaywright-EugeneIonesco, 12noonShortcomedyfromArgentinestreet tneater,1pmBothplaysinReynoldsClub1stfloortheater Mee-owShowmprovisationandcomedytroupe ReynoldsClub1stfloortheater,8pm FRIDAY-May20 FOTAGoesUndergroundjvemuseinthePub, 10pmEvanWether&DonLindgren(IdaNoyes basement,Pubentrybymembershiponly] ModernPlaysinFrench&SpanishRepeat performancesFrenchplay8pm,Spanishplay9pmBothplaysinReynoldsClub1stfloor theater SATURDAY-May21 KiddiesOfAClock-TimeMommaMulti-media studenttalentexposition,GoodspeedRecitalHall.730pm TransformationMask/TransformationDance 1stportionofprogram-mask-makmaworkshop, idaNoyesDanceRm,1pm2ndpnof program-ritualdance.HutchCourt.'pm FOTAGoesUndergroundLivemusicintnepub, 8-midniantEltseEisenbera-Folk8-10pm FreddeHague-classicalguitar,10-mianqnt (IdaNoyesbasementPubentrybymembership only]THURSDAY-May12 OpeningDayCelebrationMorrisDancers,EF, Clown,FrendsoftheLouvre,surprises,onthe quads FRIDAY-May13 GymnasticsClubDemonstration12nooninthe quads(raindateMay20] TimeAfterTimeSAO'sAnnualSpringDance,an eveningofdancingwiththeLoueBellson Orchestra,IdaNoyesHallTicketsonsaleat ReynoldsClubTtxCenter SATURDAY-May14 FOTAGoesUndergroundLivemusicinthePub 10pm,DumbRa(IdaNoyesbasement,Pub entrybymembershiponly] SUNDAY-May15 TheUCDanceClubandJansdancesperform originalwork&piecesbyChicago ChoreographersAOsgood,P.Dodson&DPuszczewczMendelHall,830pmAdmissionS1UCstudents,$2othersTicketsatReynolds ClubTixCenter, AmericanSquare&InternationalFolkDance PartyLivemusicwithPaulCollinscallingsquare& JohnKuoteachingBalkandancesIdaNoyes ParkingLot,2-6pm PhotographyWorkshop*\LearnHowToUseYour Camera,daNoyesHall,rm*218,1pm(pre- registrationnotnecessaryforthisworkshop] MONDAY-May16 PhotographyWorkshop#2LearnHowToProcessB&WFilmIdaNoyesHall,rm*218,7-9pm(PRE- REGISTRATONREQUIRED-signupinINHrm*210] TUESDAY-May17 SaxQuartetHutchCourt,12noon PoetryWritingWorkshopconauctedbyPierre Long,IdaNoyesSunParlor,730pm WEDNESDAY-May18KateCooperDanceCompanymcorpcxates differentstylesofdance,originalpoetry,livemusic ReynoldsClub1stfloortneater,12noonFOTA'83 FestivaloftheArtsTheUniversityofChicagoFestivaloftheArtsisfundedin partbyprivatedonationsandbyagrantfromtheStudent GovernmentFinanceCommittee.Wewouldliketoexpress ourappreciationtothesepeopleandthemanyothers whohavecontributedtheirservicestoFOTA'83.Allpro¬ gramsareopentothepublicandfreeofchargeunless otherwiseindicated.Formoreinformationcall753-3562or 753-3591,Eventsaresubjecttochangeorcancellation.PhotosbyJohnProbesSUNDAY-May22 Fiddler’sConventiononthequods.1pm-dusk(itran.IdaNoyesHall.] MONDAY-May23 WallspaceJazz&Fusion,HutchCourt,12noon (ramdate:May25] TUESDAY-May24 ClassicalConcert13memPerChamber Orchestracomposedalmostexclusivelycf ChicagoSymphonyOrchestramusicons, conductedbyMarkPrentiss.MusicofMozart8c Dvorak.MandelHail,8pm WEDNESDAY-May25 MoviesInThePubindependentvideo"Bad"Girls,oftheSilverScreen-Sterlets,Harlotsand HollywoodGangsterfilmproducedbyMarc Moss,10pm,(idaNoyesbasement,Pubentry/ membershiponly] THURSDAY-May26 PhotographyWorkshop#3LearnHowToPrintB8cWIdaNoyesHall,rm*218,7-9pm.(PRE- PEGISTRATONREQUIRED-signupinINHrm.*21f3] SUNDAY-May29 MemorialDayCelebrationsponsoredbyEOTA, MAB,IFCandSG.