grey city grey citySummer Readingcover Summer Writingback pageThe Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 1 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, June 24, 1983Court finds draft-aid law unconstitutionalBy Deborah Lutterbeckand Anna FeldmanA law requiring male studentsapplying for financial aid to showproof of draft registration was de¬clared unconstitutional by a feder¬al judge in Minnesota last week.Judge Donald Alsop of the US Dis¬trict Court in St. Paul consideredthe law self-incriminating andruled against its enforcement inany state.Government attorneys plan toappeal directly to the US SupremeCourt. Because of the ruling’s con¬stitutional nature, Niel Koslowe,attorney for the Justice Depart¬ment, believes the chances of a Su¬preme Court hearing are “extre¬mely high.”A motion by the government at¬torneys to stay the judge’s orderuntil the appeal process is com¬plete was denied by Alsop Mon¬day.The law was originally passedby Congress last summer, and signed by President Reagan inSeptember. Alsop said the law di¬rectly violates a constitutional banon legislation that inflicts punish¬ment without a judicial trial.Steven Miller, attorney for theMinnesota Public Interest Group,believes that 500,000 students outof the 3 million that apply for fi¬nancial aid will benefit fromA1 sop’s ruling.The original two suits werebrought to court by six anonymousMinnesota College students, whohad not completed draft registra¬tion. Alsop’s ruling called for dele¬tion of the draft registration com¬pliance statement which iscurrently on the financial aidform.Currently the Justice Depart¬ment is trying to limit the ruling byhaving it apply only to the sixanonymous students, or only tostudents in Minnesota.Amy Silberberg of the Minneso¬ta Civil Liberties Union said, “This decision guarantees that the feder¬al government will have to charge,try and convict people of crimesbefore they are punished.’’The law itself would punish bothnon-registered applicants for aid,and students who have registeredlate in order to receive aid.Gerry Reiser, assistant directorof College Aid, expressed reliefover the judge’s decision to de¬clare the law unconstitutional. Be¬ cause of its bureaucratic nature,said Reiser, the law “would punishthe vast majority of students whowere registered by causing unnec¬essary delays in delivery of theirfinancial aid checks.”Reiser also complained that en¬forcement of the law would takeaway time from financial aid of¬ficers trying to do their jobs, andwould alienate students applyingfor aid. “We’re here to help and to serve students,” he added. “If I’min a position of policeman for thefederal government, enforcingquestionable laws, students wouldbe distressful” about coming intothe office for help.Reiser’s personal concern overthe proposed law was over its dis¬criminatory nature. For poor stu¬dents, “any kind of a delay — eventhree weeks — could be disas¬trous.”Gift to finance liver transplantsBy Deborah LutterbeckThe University Medical Centerearlier this month received a$300,000 donation for a liver trans¬plant program at Wyler Children’sHospital. The Lauren Kalis Fundwas presented by Jacquelyn andRichard Kalis whose daughterLauren died in December as a re¬sult of an inoperable liver dis¬ease.Washington, Bloom, IVI-IPOpick Hayes for Congress seatBy Cliff GrammichMayor Harold Washington, 5thWard Alderman Larry Bloom, andthe Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organiza¬tion (IVI-IPO) have endorsedlabor leader Charles Hayes’ bidfor the vacant 1st CongressionalDistrict seat.Larry BloomHayes is one of 19 candidatesvying for the post. Included in thefield are 14 Democrats, 4 Republi¬cans, and a candidate from the So¬cialist Workers’ Party. The Demo¬cratic and Republican primarieswill be held July 26, and the gener¬al election August 23.Besides Hayes, the Democratic candidates are: longtime politicalactivitist and commentator LuPalmer, who spearheaded lastyear’s black voter registrationdrive; A1 Raby, who managedWashington’s mayoral campaignand was an unsuccessful candidatefor 5th Ward Alderman in 1975;State Senator Charles Chew(D-16); State Rep. Larry Bullock(D-22); 8th Ward AldermanMarian Humes; Ralph Metcalfe,Jr., the son of the late Congress¬man and an unsuccessful candi¬date for 3rd Ward Alderman andthe 1st Congressional seat in re¬cent years; Sheila Jones, who is af¬filiated with Lyndon La Rouche’sAnti-Drug Party and was a Demo¬cratic candidate for mayor in Feb¬ruary’s primary; South Chicagoresidents Allan G. Thomas, HiramCrawford, Jr., and Donald W.Jones; and South Shore residentsLemuel Bentley, James S. Sterdi-vant, and Randell J. Hawthorne.Republican candidates for theseat include Betty Meyer andDiane Preacely of Hyde Park;Chatham resident William Mur¬ray; and Ralph Blakely of SouthChicago. Meyer has been activewith IVI-IPO for several years,and she turned Republican whenshe voted in the 1980 Republicanprimary for Presidential candi¬date John Anderson.Ed Warren will carry the Social¬ist Workers’ Party banner. War¬ren, a Hyde Park resident, was theSocialist Workers’ Party candi¬date for mayor in April’s election.On July 5, seven of the Demo¬cratic candidates will participatein a debate in Ida Noyes Hall at 7p.m. Participating candidates willinclude Hayes, Palmer, Raby,Chew, Bullock, Humes, and Met¬calfe. Harold Washington The fund was establishedthrough nationwide contributionsafter Lauren’s illness received na¬tional media coverage. The moneywas to have been used for her hos¬pitalization and liver transplant,but physicians at the University ofMinnesota Hospital, where Laurenfirst received treatment, later de¬termined that her age and healthmade her unfit for surgery.Lauren died December 21, 1982.The Lauren Kalis Fund will beused for pre-transplant evalua¬tions and treatment for childrensuffering from Biliary Atresia. Bi¬liary Atresia, is an often fatal dis¬ease that causes blockage in theduct system that carries bile to theliver from the small intestine.Two thirds of the Kalis Fund willbe used to develop a liver trans¬plant center at Wyler. Currently,there are only three hospitals inthe country that perform livertransplants: the University of Min¬nesota Hospital, Children’s Hospi¬tal in Pittsburgh, and the Universi¬ty of Tennessee Hospital. WylerChildren’s Hospital is fullyequipped to evaluate children fortransplantation, and will referchildren to other facilities until thefull program has been completed.The remaining $100,000 of theKalis Fund wrill be used to help fi¬nance liver transplants. Sinceliver transplants are still legallyclassified as experimental, theyare rarely covered by insurance.Sources say this classification willbe changed within a month.Dr. Donald W. King. Dean of theBiological Sciences and thePritzker School of Medicine, andVice-President for the Medical Center, said that “The demand forliver transplantation greatly ex-ceeds the national capacity to pro-Donald W. Kingvide the services,” and, he added.“The Kalis Fund provides the cru¬cial seed money needed to developa liver transplant program in Chi¬cago that can serve the entire re¬gion.”When announcing the news ofthe gift at a press conference, Jac¬quelyn Kalis said, "The fund isboth a memorial to our daughterand a reflection of the extraordin¬ary' generosity of Chicagoans tothe needs of children. We hopethrough additional gifts theLauren Kalis Fund will grow soevery child receives the medicalevaluation and care they need.”Contributions can be made toThe Lauren Kalis Fund, The Uni¬versity of Chicago Medical Center.1025 E. 57th St., Chicago 60637.Individuals needing more infermation regarding liver diseaseand treatment should contact thePediatric Referral Office atWyler, 962-1000.Tave new dean of humanitiesStuart Tave, a professor of En¬glish and a member of the facultysince 1951, has been named dean ofthe Humanities Division. His ap¬pointment is effective January 1.Tave succeeds Karl J. Weintraub, dean of the division since1973. According to PresidentHanna Gray, Tave “represents thecentral strength of this University,scholars committed to the higheststandards of research and the dis¬semination of their work throughteaching.”Tave has been the William Rain¬ey Harper Professor in the Collegeand the Department of Englishsince 1971. He served as chairman of the department from 1972 to1978; as master of the HumanitiesCollegiate Division from 1966 to1970; and as acting dean of the Col¬lege for part of 1969.Tave received a QuantrellAward for Excellence in Under¬graduate Teaching in 1958, and theGordon Laing Prize in 1974, givenby the University of Chicago Pressfor the best book it had published inthe previous two years, for SomeWords of Jane Austen.Tave received an AB degreefrom Columbia University in 1943,an MA from Harvard in 1947, and adoctorate in 1950 from Oxford,where he studied under a Fulbright Scholarship. Before joining thefaculty here in 1951, Tave was aninstructor at Columbia.Stuart TaveMEALS A DAYEVERYDAYat theair-conditionedINTERNATIONALHOUSEDINING ROOM• HOURS•Monday - Friday - Breakfast 7:00 a.m. - 9 :30 a.m.Lunch 11:30 a.m. -1.30 p.m.Dinner 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.Saturday & Sunday - ContinentalBreakfast 8:00 a.m. -10:00 a.m.Brunch 11:00 a.m. -1:30 p.m.Dinner 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.• Reasonably Priced •OPEN JUNE 19 - SEPTEMBER 3• OPEN TO THE PUBLIC •GROUP ARRANGEMENTS AVAILABLE: CALL 753-2282CLOSED FOR DINNER JULY 3rd AND ALL DAY JULY 4SUMMER ’83 AT HILLELSHABBAT DINNERS — ADAT SHALOM COOPERATIVE, every other Friday beginningJune 24. Sign up and pay in advance. Time: 7:30 p.m. Cost:S3.0C. Other weeks, home hospitality will be arranged for thosesigning up at Hillet.SHABBAT SERVICES — SATURDAYS: YAVNEH (Orthodox) at 915 a mUPSTAIRS MINYAN (Conservative) at 9:30 a.m.WOMEN’S MINYAN, July 16 at 9:15 a.m.JOINT KIDDUSH, July 30HOSPITAL VISITATION EVERY SATURDAy. MEET AT HILLEL AT 5:15 P.M.SPECIAL EVENTS* IIISUNDAYJULY 3 - HILLEL GOES TO GRANT PARK JULY 4TH CONCERTGather at Hillel at 4-30 p.m, Bring your own food for a picnic supper.Transportation provided.THE FOLLOWING EVENTS ARE BEING PLANNED. CHECK AT HILLEL FOREXACT DATES, TIMES, AND COSTS, AND TO SIGN UP:- EVENING AT RAVINIA - SUNDAY TRIP TO GREAT AMERICA- A SUNDAY CANOE TRIP - WHITE SOX AND CUBS GAMES- MOVIE AND BARBECUE DINNER - SIMON & GARFUNKLE CONCERTSOFTBALL AND VOLLEYBALL TEAMS ARE BEING ORGANIZED.*All Special Events will have modest charges to covercost of tickets and transportation as needed. •SPECIAL SERVICESTISHA B’AV—WORSHIP AND READING OF EICHA (BOOK OF LAMENTATIONS)MONDAYJULY 18TUESDAYJULY 19 UPSTAIRS MINYAN (Conservative) at-8:30 p.m.YAVNEH (Orthodox) at 8:30 p.m.YAVNEH (Orthodox) at 7:00 a.m. and 7-.00 p.m.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 752-1127HILLEL HOUSE - 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUEL I SUMMER COOLERS .Sale Dates: 6-24 thru 6-30LIQUOR7.99750 ml. Canadian Club750 ml Absolut Vodka 8.99750 ml Smirnoff Vodka 80 4.99LIQUERS12.99750 ml Hennessy VS750 ml Martell 12.99WINES3.49750 ml Canei (Italian Import)1.5 ltr Almaden Mountain Wines 3.991.5 ltr Inglenook Navelle Wines 3.99750 ml Blue Nun (German Import) 3.99750 ml Piper’s Extra Dry Champagne . 12.99750 ml Burati Asti Spumante 5.9941. box Los Hermanos Wines 6.99BEER3.89| 6-12 oz. bottles Beck’s Beer (warm only)1/ IMBARK LIQUORS 1lm& WINE SHOPPE .WimbarkPl^aSun.-Noon-Midnight_ _ _ Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8am-lam493*3355 Fri. & Sat. 8am - 2amPhone:MCHIKSTORETHE PHOENIX IS OPEN FOR SUMMER QUARTER• 11:00 A.M. until 5:30 P.M. •• Monday through Friday •We will not buy books over the counterfrom June 27th until July 1st, to reduceour stock for inventory. Bring this ad inand get 10% off books for your summercourse work or general reading.In the basement of Reynolds Club5706 S. UniversityTelephone: 962-85612—The Chicago Maroon-—Friday, June 24, 1983Award to NambuYoichiro Nambu, professor of physics atthe U of C, was one of 11 scientists and engi¬neers awarded the National Medal ofScience this month by President Reagan.Since 1962, 154 scientists and engineershave received the medal, the country’s high¬est scientific award.Yoichiro NambuOmbudsman reportsWith the completion of his term as studentombudsman, Mark Auslander issued thewinter quarter ombudsman’s report earlierthis month. Taking over Auslander’s posi¬tion for 1983-84 is Jean O’Brien, a graduatestudent in history.Auslander’s report showed mediation of48 different cases. Of these, 14 concerned ac¬ademic affairs, with 4 academic affairscases dealing with grade appeals. Therewere 16 different student affairs cases, 9dealing with housing problems. Ten casesconcerned various administrative affairs. In issuing his report, Auslander noted thelack of clarification of facts in severalcases. One such case involved alleged dis¬turbances by children of a resident in mar¬ried student housing. Auslander noted thathis investigations were “inconclusive,” asboth student-parent and the security officerinvolved had “different interpretations” ofthe facts of the case.Another case which had initial lack ofclarification of facts involved three studentsand their alleged drug-selling activities.Though all three students originally main¬tained their innocence, they were dismissedfrom student housing. One student, howev¬er, appealed to Auslander, further pressinghis claim of innocence. After Auslander’sactions in the case, the other two studentsinvolved agreed to testify to the innocence oftheir third roommate while admitting theirguilt. The two guilty students received aminor penalty reduction, while the third stu¬dent was reinstated to student housing.Co-op reports lossThe Hyde Park Cooperative Society haslost $97,179 in the first eight months of thisfiscal year. Manager Gilbert Spencer attri¬butes the loss to the recession and to severallarge chain stores in the area.The Co-op’s accounts are just now beingcleared up after several months in which nofinancial statements had been available.The resignation of the Co-op’s comptrollerlast January, and the hiring of a new ac¬counting and computer firm also added tothe confusion which resulted in no financialstatements being prepared.A drop in sales is also expected at theShort Stop Co-op when a new grocery storeopens in the old A&P building. Sales at theShort Stop had increased after the A&Pclosed a year ago.The SCAN furniture stores owned by theCo-op have not been as profitable as expect¬ed, and a proposal is being considered to sellthe furniture branch and possibly buy theHyde Park Shopping Center, where theCo-op is located.AEROBICS BEG. JAZZMODERN DANCE I & IIJAMNASTICS BELLY DANCEBEG. BALLETAFRICAN DANCE KARATE• All classes start the week of June 27th •• Register now until July 1st •• Room 210 Ida Noyes Hall or call 962-9554 •Payment required at time of registration by checkFROGandPEACH Good food, expertlyprepared and reasonablypriced. Fresh ingredients.Phone in “to go” ordersafter 4 p.m.(962-9736).Open Daily Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m. - 8p.m.Ida Noyes Hall 1212 E. 59th St. News in briefArgonne National LaboratoryArgonne Lab battles for acceleratorArgonne National Laboratory is engagedin a political battle with a consortium of 23southeastern universities over a contract toconstruct a $112 million electron accelera¬tor.Argonne, located in southwest suburbanWestmont, is operated by the University ofChicago. A federal advisory panel has rec¬ommended that the contract go to the south¬eastern consortium.Argonne officials maintain that their pro¬posed accelerator would cost less than theone recommended by the panel. In addition,Argonne officials note that location of theaccelerator at Argonne would place it nearan existing research center with a largestaff of scientists, which they say has an“excellent” track record. Three other pro¬posals were examined in addition to those of Argonne and the southeastern consortium.The consortium has proposed to build theaccelerator in Newport News, Virginia. Ar¬gonne officials contend that the consor¬tium’s proposed site is too far from majorresearch universities and airports. Consor¬tium officials counter that Argonne is onlyinitiating the controversy “for their owneconomic survival.” Consortium officialsmaintain that their plan would have lowercosts than Argonne’s, and that several sci¬entists from schools in the consortium haveextensive experience in building electronaccelerators or conducting experiments onthem.US Energy Secretary Donald P. Hodeltold Argonne officials he would considertheir argument during considerations forthe fiscal 1985 budget.tor>&Cou/t£$t^l(teaOoef>fV6e&^7oijOe^fhK(iic£^o^/ROUNDGROUND,?:\ GASMEN!VineeCed by Joit Ostujtdkr Owe23,7983Timsdigt ttwugl SaiiMhfg at 8pm ■ Swvhgs at 3pmcu«d 7pmTV . jfhy j $1 Kadwt/wnior discount $4 student rttmhIfCJtAf / OJ*a to 7 T* minutes before Thursday «nd Sundry performances/& rtSewafitKt ea&962-7300 Mk/rfat&aw/acaffalS/'tA <Sc l/sutsers/YvThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 24, 1983—3Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1 How Much Are Your Lenses72 How Much Are Your Lenses73 How Much Are Your Lenses74 How Much Are Your Lenses7What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. Is the doctor really a contact lense specialist7(or is he an eyeglass salesman 9)2 Can I expect professional service and care7(or will I be handled by inept non-professional salespeople9)3 Are the quality of lenses the best available7(or are they off-brands and seconds9)4 The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest priceWe at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above crite¬ria of CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY AVD PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALUES!SUPER-WET BAUSCH & LOMBFLEXIBLE SOFLENSONLY $29.00 B3, BJ,&F SERIESSuper-thin highly wet- only$33.75table lens specifically Basic series of tensesdesigned to correct that Bausch & Lombthose patients who built their reputationwere previous nardcontact lens failures on.• NEW SUPER SOFT HIGH OXYGEN TRANSFER UlTRATHIN - $43.75New super-soft highly oxygen transferable lenses used to correctthose patients who were previous soft lens failures• SUPER WET TORIC CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM - $100.00The same remarkable material as the super-wet flexible lenses but spe¬cifically designed to our exact specifications to correct for difficult as¬tigmatism• SOFT LENSES CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM (TORIC) - 8160.00If you have ever been told that you couidn t wear soft lens due to astig¬matism now you probably can• EXTENDED WEAR LENSES-$160.00The ones you sleep with no more cleaning sterilizing nightly no moredaily Insertation and Removal, wake up in the morning and seeLimit 1 pair per patientProfessional fee additional (required)(includes - Eye Examination. Training Wearing Instructions and Carrying Case)OCR PROMISE TO YOU:If you aren r pleased with your lenses after 60 days cost of the lenses will be re¬funded All contact lens fitting done by our Contact Lens Specialists.Dr S C Fostiak and Dr John S SchusterWe can replace your lost or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!(if tenses are in stock)IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST•CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED1724 Sherman Am.. Evanston. 1L 60201 7566 N. Clark St . Chicago. II 606)4(above Centity Scat)864-4441 880-5400 SuH4M0t ok ft® Quoub - Mouico!SOQ FILM PRESENTSFriday June 24 The Wind And The Lion (John Milius) 7:15 pm & 9pmSaturday June 25 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick) 7 pm & 9:30 pmWednesday June 29 Citizen Kane (Orson Welles) 8 pmFriday July 1st Breaking Away (Peter Yates) 7:15 pm & 9:15 pmAll Films shown in COBB HALL$2.00 admission(Pick up a complete souvenir film guide FREE at show)Used desks,chairs, andfilesBRAND 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111EQUIPMENT Open Daily 8:30-5Sat 9-2 |CLASSICAL DANCE OF SOUTH INDIABHARATA NATYAM RECITALbyJENNIFER PREMASAVARIRAYANdisciple of Hema RajagopalanAccompanied by guest artistfrom India:HFMALATTA, vocalsAI YAPP AN, mridangam(drums)SUNDAY, JUNE 26 - 7:30 P.M.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 59th St.Tickets: $4.00/$3.00Students Info: 753-22744—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 24, 1983GREY CITY JOURNAL24 June 1983 • 16th YearKenner Swain, graduate student in the Di¬vinity School: I have a book here I’ve beenlooking at called Wild in the Streets, sub¬titled the Boston Driver’s Handbook, by ^Ira Gershkoff and Richard Trachtmarv I Vlike the descriptions of cut-off maneuversin Boston traffic, and the discussion ofBrighton intersection dynamics Is just fab¬ulous. I’m teaching a U of C extensioncourse this summer so I’m reading autobio¬graphies — Augustine’s, Thoreau’s, for ex¬ample. I recommend (and am reading) thelesser known tales of Hawthorne — such as“Nightsketches Beneath an Umbrella” —and Henry James. I also recommend, well,nothing beats reading Paul Ricoeur’s TheSymbolism of Evil at the beach. And A Holeis to Dig, by Maurice Sendak, is also agood book to read by the beach.Marty Mathewe-prof. Emeritus, depts. Pedi¬atrics and Biochemistry: I’m readingbooks. I'm reading Joseph Campbell's TheFlight of the Wild Gander, which is onmythology and world religion. It’s rathertechnical, though, so I’d recommend as anintroduction the book he is best known forwhich is A Hero with a Thousand Faces.Also, a journal which comes out everythree months, Parabola, which deals withmythology^ „ ^William Veeder prof, in the College, and inthe dept, of English and GSHum: Ohdear...I’d recommend to undergraduatesthat they read what they didn’t during theyear. They should "waste the summer” byreading things that don’t relate toclasses...geology, art history, map mak¬ing. They should read things that will addto their sense of the world’s richness andthe richness of books; that will give them asense of other worlds that people are in¬venting their lives in.Elizabeth Helsinger prof. dept. English &Lit: I’m reading Goethe’s Italian Journey,which is very pleasant reading. It was ff/A \HIL.V/mMIL- fj*:hihSonia Jacobsen, adviser in the College: I'llbe reading a mystery by Marjorie Allingh-am, but I’ll be taking French, an intensiveclass, so I won’t be able to do much read-written in 1786 about his first trip to Italy ing. Maybe Mr. Clemens And Mark Twainand his excitement about It.Laura J. Cottlngham, feminist writer and ac¬tivist in New York and former grey city ed¬itor: Because I’m going to Paris to inter¬view feminists in July, I’m reading Marks,Wittig, de Courtivron, and recent de Beau¬voir, along with copies of Feminist issues,to try to make sense of the theory/praxissplit that’s dominated French feminism inthe last three years. I recommend any¬thing by Alice Walker, Toni Morrison,Paule Marshall, Audre Lorde, and GloriaNaylor’s brilliant first novel, The Womenof Brewster Place. These black womenwriters inject consciousness, intelligence,and sincerity into the otherwise banal su¬burban stupidity of contemporary Ameri¬can fiction. Also read Ian McEwan’s TheComfort of Strangers — an amazing novelthat proves men can comprehend male he¬gemony if they want to; McEwan does, andhow!Glen Sheffer, graduate student in Englishand attendant at the Renaissance Society:l want to read the Bible because t havenever read it before. I’ll probably justread the Old Testament. I’m not really In¬terested in the New Testament. I’ve al¬ready started reading Genesis, and I thinkits weird. I’m also probably going to reada lot of Robert Browning. And I recom¬mend anything by Gertrude Stein.Nicholas Rudall, Director of Court Theater,prof, in the College, and in the dept, ofClassical Lang, and Lit., GSHum., AncientMed. World: Well, I’m leaving for Walestomorrow, but the main thing would be theBook of Ebenezer LePage by G. B. Edward,and reading play after play, starting withHedda Gabler by Ibsen. But I’m not reallygoing to be reading much this summer.Keith Fleming, gcj absentee: I want to final¬ly read Louise Fitshough’s Harriet the Spybecause I’ve always had an inferioritycomplex about my lack of childhood read¬ing. A morbid brilliant seventeen year oldwriter suggested I read Djuna Barnes’Nightwood because she says it will takemy breath away. The poet Lloyd Schwartzmade a pass at me last night and I thoughtit would be civil for me to flirt with hisbook These People (whatever that is). HH7by Justin Kaplan, and I’d recommend any-|thing by Anne Tyler,Andrew Patner, Maroon editor 1979-80,Associate editor, Chicago magazine Hay-marketeer: This summer I will try to catchup on some American literature. I am read¬ing Hemingway, because I never have;Faulkner, because it will be very hot; andNelson Algren who is like a writer from alost world. Since I sometimes try to be ajournalist, I will read books by reporterswho can write: Daughters and Rebels, AFine Old Conflict, and Poison Pensmanshipby Jessica Mitford; Reporting and Takesby Lillian Ross; and Growing Up by RussellBaker. For big reads I will try Middle-march, to see what all the fuss is about;Roads to Freedom by Sartre, because ldon’t think I read the third part, Iron in theSoul; and the Nevl im (Prophets) books ofthe Bible.One reads to learn and I recommend twobooks by two good learners who are alsoteachers, in A Man’s Life, Roger Wilkinsdelivers a testament that, because ft saysso much about the last fifty years, the fiftyyears of his life, is indispensable to an un¬derstanding of where black people are inthe 1980s. It is aiso a book about self-dis¬covery and humility like no other I know.George Anastaplo remains the most chal¬lenging American essayist. The Artist AsThinker: From Shakespeare to Joyce(Swallow/Ohio University Press) is a text¬book in the best sense: A weli-craftedstudy of thirteen authors that is a breezeof fresh air blowing past the compost ofcontemporary “criticism”. Appendices onthe Greek poet George Seferis and thecontroversial political theorist Leo Straussexplore the importance of the artist as aperson. Czeslaw Milosz’s poetry and TheCaptive Mind provide a context for the Po¬lish fight for freedom. J. Ronald Engel'sSacred Sands: The Struggle for Communityin the Indiana Dunes will tell me somethingabout where I hope to do all this reading.Kenneth Northcott, prof, in the College, andin the depts of Germanic Lang, and Lit,Comparative Studies, and GSHum: Stu¬dents should read the Bible since it is thebasis for all western literature, the Odys- Hiuhngsey by Homer, and all Russian Novelists.He will be concentrating on Dostoevsky,and The Dance of the Music of the Times byAnthony Powell, a social history of Bri¬tain. Lots of playsr mostly new but stu¬dents might try Hamlet, if they havent’ al¬ready. Anything by Thomas Hardyespecially Tess and The Mayor of ConstantBridge. Anything by Samuel Beckett espe¬cially Endgame and Waiting For Godot. Healso will be reading the new translation ofProust. If it wasn't enough already, heleaves on his bedside many dectectivenovels currently one by Cathrine Airb andwhen he needs to relax he picks up booksby Anthony Toroolip.Jeffrey Makos, Focus! editor (Doc Films),and former grey city editor. For summerfun, I turn to the master of the trash — epichorror novel, Stephen King. Essentialreading in this last summer before 1984:The Stand, In which a biological plaguewipes out most of the US population drawnto, of all places...Las Vegas, where the dia¬bolical “Walkin Dude” reigns supreme.Recommended for ail those interested inAmerican Studies.Karen Hornlck, Ph.D. candidate in Englishand Comparative Literature, ColumbiaUniversity and former grey city associateeditor: With my orals approaching, I’vededicated the summer to British fiction ofthe 19th Century. I’m reading whay my ad¬visor calls “the major novels of the majornovelists” — all 76 of them, from Austin toConrad. I can’t wait to read Trollope, arather depressing indication of my state ofmind. To everyone l recommend twonewly-available monuments of criticismthat were, for too long, unobtainable asU.S. paperbacks: Raymond Williams' Cul¬ture and Society (Columbia, June) andLukacs’ The Historical Novel. For beautyI'm reading Gloria Naylor’s The Women ofBrewster Place. For Trash (and my studygroup on popular culture) I’m reading JeanStein and George Plimpton’s Edie. I willmake the most of any spare moment by notreading Norman Mailer's new novel; 1 willlisten to Prince.Jonathon Z. Smith, Robert O Anderson Dis¬tinguished Service Professor of the Hu¬manities and in the College, Program Co¬ordinator, Religion and the Humanities:This summer I’ll be reading all of PhilipDick. I figure it’s about time I got intospace — it seems like that’s the thing to do ' v ' *3 * % Bthese days. I recommend that people readthe Bible this summer. It s always goodreading,Jim Wooten, graduate student In Anthro¬pology: Christopher HHl, Milton and the En¬glish Revolution, and Pierre Bourdieu, LaDistinction. I would recommend the newKeith Thomas book, Man and the NaturalWorld, which I haven’t read yet, but I likedhis other book a lot, and Walter Abisch,How German is it? — That’s a great book,everybody should read it.Ken Wissoker, gcj, Seminary Coop employ¬ee: I change my mind about what I thinkI’m going to read about every week — inthe meantime I spend my reading hourswith the Village Voice, New Musicaf Ex¬press, and other magazines. Right now I’mexcited about the new issue of camera ob-scura devoted to Godard, which includesan entertaining debate between Godardand Pauline Kael. where she tries earnest¬ly to be political, while he, not so earnestlyavoids it. I also hope to get to the newJames Boon book, ; Other Tribes, OtherScribes, and to the new Alice Miller, ForYour Own Good. I’ve begun the Millerbook, and it seems misrepresented by thejacket blurb as some kind of psychobio¬graphy, whereas she clearly means it to bea continuation of her last book, Prisonersof Childhood. The last is now in paperbackunder the title The Drama of the GiftedChild, and l would strongly recommend itto anyone who hasn’t read it, especiallythose who think their work is either greator a failure, or who by other means are ac¬cumulating incompletes and/or depres¬sion.Bert CoWer, prof, in the College, and indepts of Behavioral Science, Education,and Psychiatry: The faculty spends itssummer doing what it didn’t have time todo during the year, so I’m reading abou*infant research. At the top of my fist ofbooks to read is Foucault’s The Order ofThings. Another is Berger and Berger'sThe War over the Family — a very contro¬versial book. And the Analytic Attitude.by Roy Schafer, who is an analyst in NewYork; he has written one of the most lucidaccounts of psychoanalysis in manyyears.Pat Cannon, student in the College: I will bereading Of Grammortoiogy by JacquesDerida, The Debate on Edgar Allen Poe sPurloined Letters, by Jacques Derida andJacques Lacan: Birth of a Tragedy by Fre-derich Nietzsche. And on the lighter side.New Musical Express and public serviceannouncements.Stuart Tave, prof, in the College, dept ofEnglish, and Director of Humanities: Thissummer I plan to catch up on old NewYorkers. I'll be reading a book somebodysent me by Gavin Daws, A Dream of Is¬lands. It combines history and literatureand is beautifully written, about theAmerican and European discovery ot thePolynesian Islands. It begins with the ear¬lier explorers in the 18th century and theirimpressions. It discusses various charac¬ters; missionaries, literary figures (Mel¬ville.' Stevenson), artists (Gauguin). Dawsis an Australian who has taught at the Uni¬versity of Hawaii. I recommend anythingby the biologist/geologist Stephen JayGould. He writes very well on scientificguestions and the relation of science toevolution and the testing of intelligenceThe Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes,edited by Sutherland, is a collection of an¬ecdotes about literary characters takenfrom sources such as diaries and letters.It's very funny and entertaining. The no¬velist Barbara Pym writes about little bitsof everyday life in London: one book, Ex¬cellent Women, is written in the first-per¬son about the kind of woman one says is“excellent "-colorless and low-key. It'swritten quite well, with insight and it's anice change from detective and science fic¬tion stories. Lastly, there is a book calledShows of London, an older book by Alltick,a historical survey of shows, public exhib¬itions in London through the centuries —strang characters and educations' exhib¬its and unusual animals, it is fascinatingand has a lot of marvelous pictures.TICKETS TO RAVINIA!Ella Fitzgerdld/Oscar PetersonTuesday June 28th 8:00 p.m.Lawn Ticket cnW/Round Trip Bus Transportation S/.ouAll concerts at RAVINIA Park, bus leaves from Ida Noyes at 6:30 p.m.(return stops at International House, Ida Noyes & Regenstein approx,midnight. Tickets & Bus Reservations available at Rm 210 Ida Noyes &International House Program Office (checks only, please).For more information call 962-9554 or 753-2274An SAO and International House serviceDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335% Student Discounts9:00 AM.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridaySat. 10-4Look like a million without investing a fortune. TheHAIR PERFORMERS offer you a hair design that'sworth its weight in gold. At a remarkably lowpnce $5.00 OFFSPECIAL OFFER COMPLETE HAIR SHAPING AND STYLING OR50% OFF PERMSOffers good for first time clients with participating designers only.The1621 E. 55th St.*241-7778Open 7 Days ©1TV Hair Performers. 1983 Put the pastin yourfuture!IIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary7 living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.—All new kitchens and appliances — Community7 room—Wall-to-wall carpeting — Resident manager—Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry7 facilities onparking each floorStudios, One, Tw7o and Three Bedroom apartments.One Bedroom from $480 — Two Bedroom from $660Rent includes heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643-1406In Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and Industry'Equal Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex. IncMAROON96295552—FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL24 25 26 27 28 29 30got it, an incredibly trite; plot which the tion.screenwriter tried to update but in fact he The dancing is outstanding with,the rockJi JK dicJ llttle since th® characters are as shal- steady crew participating in one scene,IbII ■■ low as ever. As with the music, it is all too then Ms. Beals stealing their steps along■ I llrillV Via predictable. with many others from classical and mod-Ms. Beals plays her role competently ern dance ,as well as gymnastics moves,by Stephen Diamond and does everything she is suppposed to. truly integrating all the styles. Here alsoIn the continuing saga of Stephen Dia- She sure looks fine, she sure moves well, was the big contrast I found interesting,mond seeing and reviewing the biggest in The same could be said for the male actor Ms. Beals and her best friend, an ice-skat-pop movies, I went to see Flashdance. In- (yes, I have forgotten his name.) He owns a er, are the only competitors who dance todeed it is a great movie, lending insight Porsche and doesn't make it back’ to his and utilize rock dance music rather thaninto themany different parts that create house after the first date, if you datch my classical or muzac crap. This immediatelythe increcTiBIe society that we live in. First drift. It is all timed so mechanically and makes the audience think they are rebelsthe songs, “Flashdance’ and “Maniac' the supporting actors do so little to get in and^side with them. Thus, the dancing-.is(watch out for the second one — it is the the stars' way or to enhance their perfor- truly innovative and integrated. (Boy do Inext charttopper). I am sure you have all mances that the audience is always com- like’ these words which try to bridge cultur-heard “‘Flashdance," so why say anything pletely aware that they are just acting. So ai gaps.)about it except that it isn't innovative nor far everything fits together perfectly: all Finally,-the cinematography is outstand-is it catchy. “Maniac,” which you may not dull and predictable. ing. As with Valley Girl and all of trre otherhave heard, is even worse: a white man As with my last review, the reader may pop films, and of course MTV, the shotssinging to a discofied beat with inane ask why-1 like fhe movie. No, Boy George lasted for no longer than 5 seconds, thelyrics about the joys of dancing. doesn't come on half way into the picture camera thus supplying a good percentageSo much for the sound track, on to the What makes Flashdance are the visual ef- of the action and movement. This tech-plot: It is the basic boy-girl plot with a few fects The costumes have spawned the nique is truly the path of the future. Nomodern-day twists. A woman works in a wearing of cut-off sweat shirts which bare ' longer does the audience have to lingersteel mill and go-go dances at night. Boss ones shoulders. Skin and more skin. Ms. **■ jbver the actor; rather, the camera movesspots her, love at first sight. She won t go Beals always wears the same sweatshirt. V %nd redefines the characters for us. Fur-, out with him He saves her from being always showing skin, so that the audience Ttjhermore, the lighting is excellent, makingraped. He gets to go out with her. They fall is assured that she is a beautiful woman. ‘n-frie film seem very polished and on thehopelessly in love. They have one break- The man, too, is impeccably dressed, sport- whole very well done.up because she thought she saw him with ing the beautiful look. Alas, since this style Thus the movie succeeds because of itsanother woman, all a big mistake, and all costs- money and is somewhat conserva- visual effects, which makes sense since, ac-ends happily with her going to Jullrard five, it is not being followed by the men as cording to Gerry Mast, a movie is some-and keeping the man she loves. Yes, you is the ripped shirt by the women of our na- thing that has pictures and moves.DANCEClassical Dance of South India BharataNatyam, Recital, by Jennifer PremaSavarirayan. Sun June 26 at 7:30.Tickets $4, 3 for students. 1-House,1414 E 59 St. 753-2274.Songs, Dreams, and Tall Tales A danceperformed by Joeile Peterson, JeanElvin, and Susan Bradford. Fri June24 and Sat June 25 at 8:30. Tickets$6, 5. MoMing Dance & Arts Center,1034 W Barry. 472-9894.FILMThe Wind and The Lion (John Milius,1975) Fri June 24 at 7:15 and 9.S.A.O. at Quantrell $2.2001, A Space Odyssey (Stanley Ku¬brick, 1968) Sat June 25 at 7 and 9.S.A.O. at Quantrell $2.The Seventh Seal (Ingmar Bergman,1956) Sun June 26 at 8. DOC atQuantrell $2.The Missouri Breaks (Arthur Penn,1976) Tues. June 28 at 8. DOC atQuantrell $2.Citizen Kane (Orson Welles, 1941) Wed.June 29 at 8. S.A.O. at Quantrell52.Only Angels Have Wings (HowardHawks, 1939) Thur. June 30 at 8:30.LSF $2.Over the Edge (Jonathan Kaplan, 1979)Suburban boredom, teenage style.These unexceptional Americanyouths find trouble as it finds them;the problem is portrayed as institu¬tional and structural as much ashuman. This is made possible pri¬marily by the acting of Matt Dillonas the central (though otherwise un-priviledged) kid, especially in rela¬tion to his parents and peers. Thelocal school gets trashed, but thereign of youth is momentary; andlove cannot offer lasting relief ei¬ther. A film to make the young a bitolder; maybe the old a bit younger.Not incidentally, and in spite of thefilm’s general worth, its soundtrackis unexceptional AM radio Rock/Pop(Cars, Police), which might be whatkids like these listen to, but whichdoes not qualify this as an appro¬priate selection for a rock & roll filmfestival. Mon 27 June at 7; Tue 28June at 9: and Wed and Thur 29 and30 June at 7 at Facets, 1517 W Ful¬lerton. 281-4114. $3 —DMTHEATERRound and Round the Garden Writtenby Alan Ayckbourn, directed byJohn Ostrander. The last part ofAyckbourn’s three part sex farce,the ‘Norman Conquests'. ThorughJuly 17. Peformances Thur thru Satat 8, Sun at 3 and 7. Tickets $7, 9.Court Studio Theatre, 57th and Uni¬versity.How the Other Halt Loves Written byAlan Aychbourn, directed byLawrence Neal Moss. The play, afarce, concerns the infidelity ofthree New York couples. Opens FriJune 24 at 8. Performances Fri, Satat 8; Sun at 3. Tickets $6, 7. StageLeft Theatre Company, 3244 NClark. 883-8830.Tour of Duty by Denise DeClue, JeffBerkson, and John Karraker. A reallife story about the Grimm Brothers,a Chicago based nightclub act of thesixties. Produced by the ChicagoTheatre Project. Opens Wed June 29at 6:30. Theatre Building, 1225 WBelmont. 549-1342.The Disappearance of the Jews byDavid Mamet, Gorilla by Shel Silver-stein, and Hot Line by Elaine May.Through July 3. Performances Tuesthru Thur at 7:30; Fri, Sat, Sun at 8.Tickets $10. Goodman Theatre, 200S Columbus Dr. 443-3800. tronhand by Goethe; produced by theAbsolute Theatre Company. OpensTues June 28 at 6:30. The IvanhoeTheater, 750 W Wellington.649-1440.ART1983 M.F.A. Candidates Paintings andsculpture by eight U of C students.Through 9 July at the RenaissanceSociety Bergman Gallery, 4th floorCobb. Tue-Sat, noon-4. 962-8670.Free.C. Fietcher Drawings. Through 2 Julyat the Younger Gallery, 1428 E53rd. Mon-Fri, noon-9; Sat, 10-6;Sun, noon-6 . 752-2020. Free.New Jewelry through 30 June at Arti¬sans 21, 5225 Harper. 288-7450.Free.Chicago Artists: Continuity and ChangeLarge showing of mostly paintingand some sculpture by many of thecity’s most recognized artists. Theshow's central proposition — thatthe figurative and the abstractmodes are “opposite” and “endur¬ing” characteristics of Chicago art —is simplistic; the art is more in¬volved. Closes Thur, 30 June atPrinters Square, 76 W Polk. Tue-Sat,11-5. 939-0019. Free.Bruce Davidson: The Subway Series.Color photographs of NYC. Through30 July at Columbia College, 600 SMichigan. Mon-Fri, 10-4; Sat,noon-4 . 663-1600 ext 104. Free.1983 Traveling Fellowship Exhibition.Painting, sculpture, and video byeight artists. Through 15 July at theSchool of the Art Institute, Columbusat Jackson. Mon-Wed, Fri, Sat,10:30-4:30; Thur, 10:30-7:30; Sun,noon-4:30. 443-3703. Free.An Open Land: Photographs of the Mid¬west, 1852-1982. Through 14 Aug atthe Art Institute, Michigan atAdams. Mon-Wed, Fri, 10:30-4:30;Thur, 10:30-8; Sat, 10-5; Sun,noon-5. 443-3500. Admission discre¬tionary except Thur, free.Dogs! Sixty works in a variety ofmedia, each representing some¬body’s best friend. The Museum at¬tributes great significance to thissimplistic and unappealing curatori¬al concept and thinks it raises(though in keeping with the age,does not settle) all manner of art-related issues, which of course itdoes not and cannot. Time to revise George Carlin’s dog joke: What doesthe Museum do on its day off? Can’tlie around: that’s what it does for aliving Through 29 July at the Muse¬um of Contemporary Art, 237 E On¬tario. Tue-Sat, 11-5; Sun, noon-5.280-2660. $2, $1 students, exceptTue, free. —DMAwards in the Visual Arts 2. Painting,sculpture, photography, video-per¬formance, and graphics by tenAmerican artists. Through 21 Au¬gust at the MCA; info above.Anne Truitt, paintings and sculpture,through 30 July; Mimi Dolnick,mixed media works on paper andJanau Noerdlinger, paintings andworks on paper, both close tomor¬row at Artemisia Gallery, 9 W Hub¬bard. Tue-Sat, 11-5. 751-2016.Free. Ellen Lanyon Paintings, drawings, andconstructions. Closes tomorrow atN.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W Hubbard.11-5. 467-6550. Free.Nancy Boswell-Mayer, paintings; JudithAlberte Kasen, paintings; Larry Mil¬lard, installation. Closes tomorrowat ARC Gallery, 6 W Hubbard. 11-5.266-7607. Free.Alliance Performance works in the di¬rection of dance, with music, byyoung trained locals. Tonight and to¬morrow at 8:30 at Links Hall Studio,3435 N Sheffield. 281-7804. $4, $3students.A Pattern Developing Performance, in¬stallation, and music by members ofthe Carpet Stain collective, a localgroup associated with the RedWedge Art Show and (more recently)The Noise Factory perfor- mance/music/art space and Kno~where mag, devoted to performanceart. Certainly ‘alternative,’ proba¬bly alienating, possibly good.' Twoseparate programs, tonight and to¬morrow at 8 at Randolph Street Gal¬lery, 756 N Milwaukee. 666-7737.53, 52 students.Grounded/West Hubbard Apparently,the WH Gallery artists come to roostin somebody else’s space Could begood. Through 26 July at the Con¬temporary Art Workshop. 542 WGrant Place. Tue-Sat, 11-5.525-9624 FreePsychic Territoriality in the Post-Mod¬ern Era. Like the institution thathouses it, a thoroughly odd show.Fifteen or so artists were asked toproduce works completely unlikethose they had been known for in thepast; the resulting collection is sup¬posed to shed light on the question,"Does art express the self more sothan the society in which it is pro¬duced?” Good question, but theshow won't (can't) answer it, but isgood anyway. Through ? at NABGallery, 331 S Peoria. Tue. Sat.11:30-4:30 . 733-0886. Free.Sylvia Plimack Mangold Paintings.1965-83. Opens tonight, 5-7 atYoung Hoffman Gallery. 215 W Su¬perior. Through 30 July: Tue-Sat,10-5:30. 951-8828. Free.Gerhard Richter, abstract paintings;and John Baldessari, conceptualphotos. Closes tomorrow atMarianne Deson Gallery. 340 WHuron. Today, -5:30; tomorrow,11-5. 787-0005. Free.Michelle Stone Funky painting/con¬structions depicting sexual struggle.Through 8 July at Nancy Lurie Gal¬lery. 1632 N LaSalle. Tue-Sat. 11-5.337-2882. Free.New Talent Seven artists. Through Au¬gust at Zolla/Lieberman Gallery,356 W Huron. Tue-Sat, 11-5:30.944-1990. FreeKen Heinze Large, brightly colored,expressive paintings of gesturesand people. Tomorrow only, 3-6 atthe Heinze home, 7847 W Berwyn.631-8642. FreeMUSICWindy City Gay Chorus Directed byRichard Garrin and featuring GinniClemmens. Sat June 25 at 8:07 Tick¬ets 56, 8, 10. Civic Theatre, 20 NWacker. 248-5423One Shining Moment A musical celebra¬tion of John F. Kennedy, by AllanJay Friedman and Leslie Bricusse,directed by Dennis Rosa. Perfor¬mances Tues - Sat, matinees Wed,Sat, Sun Tickets $11-15. Drury LaneThetre/Water Tower, 175 E Chest¬nut. 266-0500Grey City Journal 6/24/83Staff: Steven Diamond, Kathy Kelly, Nadine McGann, Maddy Paxman,John Probes, Beth Sutter, Ken WissokerProduction: Lorraine Kenny, David Miller, Sharon PeshkinEditors: Lorraine Kenny, Leah Mayes, Sharon Peshkin i\ fATf£RN DEVELPFttiGnoise factory 1 0 1 9 w. LAKEFILMvideoANDSIMF£Jr\l FUtsi RUN'tz.00 8 -00 f-AfOCP tV ILL A>JAlC A, |_eFOR J40RE INFO CALL 733-324S a STAINED GWT PHOwcrior:Poster for an earlier performance of A Pattern Developing at The Noise Factory;tonight and tomorrow's is at Randolph Street Gallery.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1983—3LDennisStockCONNECTIONSby Sharon PeshkinMr. Golden stepped from the plane withthe tentative steps of one testing the ice tosee if it is thick enough to walk upon. Hehated Florida already. Here to greet himwere a few false-looking palm trees and avast expanse of cement, as though whathad once been a jungle had been coveredovernight with concrete so that stuccohouses could be slapped up and profitscould be made. The air was muggy, thewind hardly refreshing. Good for hisheart? My dear Doctor Solomon, you aresadly mistaken. Any heart which had bea¬ten in one city for 66 years would ratherburn out there than break in exile. Buthe’d left the north, sacrificed authenticseasons and surroundings for this whi¬tewashed senior citizens’ ward, and heknew he would have to make the best ofit.His apartment was located “near theocean.” That meant he only had to crossthree main highways and walk throughten consecutive layers of highrise ocean-view condominiums in order to get aglimpse of the water. Even the sand didn’tseem real here. Sand was supposed to bethe product of rock eroded by waves intosmaller and smaller pebbles. But thesebeaches — why, they looked more likemassive cigarette stands, bright and ashy.And never had he seen so many peopledoing absolutely nothing, just lying abouton blankets and turning various unnaturalshades of pink and red. It was all — well,decadent. But here he was: Golden theNew York social worker, Golden the hardworking, concerned citizen, plucked out ofhis city and dropped into a land in whichwork and action were moot issues, left be¬hind in favor of passivity and mindless¬ness.Almost to his surprise, Mr. Golden rea¬lized that the lethargy of the beach wasnot at all infectious. The pace of life wasnot easily slackened. He found himself get¬ting to know the area, though not to like it;making acquaintances among his neigh¬bors, occasionally invited to dinners orparties. But for the most part he wasalone, and lonely as he hadn’t been sinceright after Jeanette’s death fifteen —could it really be so long? — fifteen yearsago. Then he had immersed himself in hiswork, channeled his care and concern intohis cases. Now that, too, had been stolenfrom him. It was hard to keep abreast ofthe rapid changes in the lives of the peoplehe had worked with in New York, andharder still to be uninvolved — to be in¬formed rather than consulted. Immediacywas lost in the mail; the hastily written let¬ters from his colleagues left him feelingmore and more an outsider, the lonesomeeye aware of but apart from the swirlingstorm around him. He began to recognizein himself a response he had so often diag¬nosed in other people — he began to loseinterest in the cases up north. A nealthyresponse, he told himself, the only defenseone has in such circumstances. But he couldnot rationalize away his loneliness. Couldhis — had his — become the “hollow an¬ cient eyes” of the song, “waiting for some¬one to say ‘hello’ ”? He shook his head torid it of such preposterous, self-indulgentthoughts.Mr. Golden began to tan. His northernskin, so unused to such treatment, seemedto develop spots and wrinkles before hiseyes. His mirror reflected an older maneach day. But there was, he had to admit,something truly refreshing about wakingup in the mornings to a cool, salty breezeand the sound of glass chimes bouncing la¬zily against one another on the balcony.“Peaceful” was the word that came tomind; a serenity he had never known upnorth, and would never have believed hecould stand. News from New York becameever less frequent. Life became evercalmer. Slowly, insidiously, a Floridianpace of life was curbing his city energyand calming his city nerves.It overtook him one sleepy Sunday inearly May. Calmly, resignedly, Mr. Goldenrealized that he was a Floridian. It hadn’tstruck him when he had obtained a Floridalicense, for that was a local regulation, norwhen he became a voting citizen, for thatwas his duty. He hadn’t even been sur¬prised to discover that he was the longest-dwelling resident of his apartment build¬ing, for that had happened many times upnorth. But this morning he was sitting atthe breakfast table, feeling every day ofhis 75 years, and reading an ad he hadplaced in the local paper: “Elderly gentle¬man seeks assistance with paperwork, oc¬casional housework.” And as he relaxedwith his coffee, the mid-morning sun bounc¬ing between the spotless white floor,white walls, white counters and table, herealized that he was, in spite of all hisformer depositions, content.Thomas was a pleasant young man. Hewas a divorcee of fifteen years after astormy five year marriage which heclaimed had left him utterly disillusionedabout the dangerous dream of domesticbliss. He had lived all of his 45 years inFlorida, and worked as an accountant in a local firm, combatting his loneliness, he ex¬plained, by working long days and read¬ing mystery stories by night. Each Satur¬day he would assist Mr. Golden with thework which was such a strain for his de¬teriorating eyes. Then the two men wouldspend long afternoons drinking lemonadeand talking. Mr. Golden soon came to de¬pend upon Thomas’ companionship almostas much as upon his help. All week hewould enjoy his solitude, but on Saturdayshe would burst forth, overwhelmed byhow much he had to share with Thomas andhow few hours he had in which to share it.And Thomas, too, looked forward to theseSaturday visits. He had few free hours andfewer friends during the week, and foundhis visits with Mr. Golden a nice change ofpace. Each week he had a new story tosummarize for Mr. Golden, whose weakeyes now kept him from reading. Togetherthey would explore tales of fantasy andterror, until the sun set and Thomas had tomeet his ex-wife and children acrosstown.If contentment was Mr. Golden’s firstconcession to Florida, it was the law whichimposed upon him a second. He certainlyhadn’t meant to speed, but he hadn’t seenthe sign and simply wasn’t aware of howfast he was traveling or how far into theleft lane he had drifted. Losing his licensewas a perverse extension of the loss of hiseyesight. He was stranded now — strand¬ed as never before. Thomas had agreed totake him wherever he needed to go, hadeven offered to come in on Monday andThursday evenings to help him with his er¬rands, but Mr. Golden knew that this wasonly the beginning of a time-honored pat¬tern of becoming ever slower and weakeruntil he would be just another dodderingold man with a golden-brown Florida tan.Issues which had never before been ofmuch more than a philosophical interestfor Mr. Golden took on a new urgency.“I’m not so young, Thomas,” he said oneevening, “eighty years is a long time for abody to keep going. I want you to knowthat God forbid I should become...sick,seriously sick, I don’t want to be kept aliveby extraordinary artificial means.” AndThomas, reflecting on these kinds of state¬ments, realized in himself and Mr. Goldena horror of dying completely unlike the fa¬scinating horror of death. It seems more afear of ongoing frustration and sufferingthan of complete loss, and although it wasas mysterious as any story he had everread, Thomas did not want to think aboutthe plot of this one.Thomas was especially fond of thestories of Edgar Allan Poe, and never tiredof reexamining these horrific tales, espe¬cially with Mr. Golden who was alwaysable to add something to his understand¬ing. There was something which naggedThomas about the resolution of Poe’sstories, something about the moral verdictwhich Poe would not divulge, leaving thereader to do the hardest part himself.“The Oval Portrait” especially perplexedhim for, as he explained to Mr. Golden,“The painter loved his bride, that’s why heinsisted upon painting her. But Poestresses that he would not see that as hegave life to the canvas he was draining itfrom her. So, in a way, he murdered her, yet...” Thomas paused, at a loss, then con¬tinued, “You know, in some way he gaveher a new life. Or life in a new form..."“Well,” Mr. Golden replied, “it’s atricky issue. I think Poe hints that althoughhe deprives her of life in this world, or inflesh, he confers upon her a kind of immor¬tality. But that’s my reading — you can’tassume that that was Poe’s intended mes¬sage.”“That’s just it,” agreed Thomas, enthu¬siastically, “Regardless of what Poemeant, it says that to me!”Mr. Golden found Thomas’ energy re¬freshing. He had begun a partial retire¬ment and now spent four days each weekhelping Mr. Golden with his paperwork,driving him where he needed to go, assist¬ing with the cooking and cleaning, andtalking, always talking, about mysteries.And Mr. Golden realized that he hadgrown accustomed to hearing rather thanreading the daily news, phoning those upnorth rather than exchanging letters, anddepending more heavily than ever beforeupon Thomas.But there was one thing Mr. Goldencould never have anticipated and knew hecould never come to accept. Lately, whiletalking to Thomas, while looking for mis¬placed objects, even while listening to theradio, Mr. Golden would catch himself mo¬mentarily disoriented, as though he wasgetting lost in the flow from one thought tothe next and getting caught in the crevicesbetween ideas. He avoided speaking of itto Thomas — could he detect it? — but Mr.Golden was frightened. He felt trapped, aprisoner within the walls of his own body,and no amount of pounding and screamingcould free him. Up until recently his fail¬ings had been physical and he had beenable to rationalize his way out of feelingsof despair. It was just his body — he wasstill intact. But if his mind, too, began tofail him, then who was he, anyway? Andwhat then? Thomas had always been thereto pick up where Mr. Golden’s physicalfailings left off; a compensation if not acure. But where his mind was concernedeven Thomas, his best friend, his physicalextension, would be unable to help.The day Thomas retired was a happyone. Mr. Golden took him out to dinner tocelebrate. Thomas had a gold watch and acomfortable pension; Mr. Golden had aterrific idea. The next week Thomasmoved in with Mr. Golden, feeling that theexchange of room and board for compan¬ionship was superfluous — he wanted tocome live with Mr. Golden, who was forhim a friend, a father, a teacher and more.Thomas was eager to relax his pace; to beable to spend 24 hours a day with access tohis enormous library of mysteries and sonear Mr. Golden. But things were changingnoticeably now, almost daily. Soon Mr.Golden was sleeping half the day and nap¬ping through the rest. Thomas began tohave recurrent anxiety dreams about Mr.Golden floating away beyond his reach orfading into a misty memory. He oftenawoke in a sweat. “You are the age I waswhen I first came to Florida,” Mr. Goldenhad told him recently. Mr. Golden hadthought he was too much alive for Floridaback then. Now it looked like Florida hadoutlived him.• • •The plane landed at La Guardia andThomas’ first steps into New York wereswift and determined. The hustle and bust¬le of the airport, the noise and smog of thestreets beyond; it wasn’t scenic, but it wasinvigoratingly alive. There was so much toattend to — Mr. Golden’s estate, his ownarrangements. In Thomas’ pocket was alist of names of people he knew so wellthrough Mr. Golden although they hadnever actually met. How strange, hethought, this intricate network of people.He ran his fingers over the list; some of thepeople who correspond to the names mayhave moved away or passed away, butthe others, he felt sure, would be anxiousto welcome him. “Thomas,” Mr. Goldenhad told him, “You’ve been a breath ofNew York in Florida. What is there for youhere?” Thomas stood by i.’<e curb waitingfor a cab, feeling the wind whipping hispants legs and urging him to hurry on.Wanted for back page: Short stories,poems, photos, essays — all creativeworks (not that reviews, analyses, etc.aren't creative — they are, and we wantthem too).4—FRIDAY; JUNE 24,'1983^-THf/GREY CITY JOURNALro/n&ea/ (M/a/e %.493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEFIRST TIME AND PRIME LOCATION57TH AND DORCHESTERThe charm of “Mews” building woodburningfireplace-double length LR-DR combo, study -one bedroom all priced to sell$55,000SPACIOUS, GRACIOUS SEVEN ROOMCONDO ON HYDE PARK BLVD.Parking in Madison Park$130,000(negotiable)OPEN HOUSE2-4 P.M.SUNDAY, JUNE 265402 EAST VIEW PARK(One Block West of Outer Drive)$59,0005 Rooms, Private ParkSee the Lake5300 SOUTH SHORE DRIVE$133,0007 Rooms, 3 BathsSplendid ConditionParking, Enjoy the Lake, Enjoy the Park,Enjoy the new street in frontWOW! Imagine campus location, sunny4-room in vintage lowrise for only $46,000.This is what we call a terrificallymotivated seller, At 56th & Kimbark RockefellerChapelSunday9 a.m.Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 a.m.University Religious ServiceSCOTT O. STAPLETON,Assistant to the Deanof the Chapel12:15and 4 p.m.Carillon Recital DR. M. R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100!» Amencan Optometnc AmooMorThe Closer You Get The Better We Look!Hyde Park’s Completely NewApartment ResidenceA Short Walk From The Lake And:Harper Ct. • University of ChicagoThe I. C. • RestaurantsIncludes• Master T. V. Antenna • New Ceramic Tile• Ind. Control Heat • New Appliances• Wall to Wall Carpeting • Night Doormen• Central Air Conditioning1 Bedrooms from $375 - 2 Bedrooms from $4755200 S. BLACKSTONE A VE.1 BLOCK WEST OF HARPER COURT^j^yfon.-ZT). 9-6 Sat. 12-6 Sun. I2-.5 6B4-8666ASK ABOUT RISC. SO SEC LTUTY DEPOSIT]4° V.m AmericaSHARE LIFE —DONATE BLOODUniversity of ChicagoBlood BankCall 962-6247 for appointment PRESSES up to 25x58...Fast print to 22x28The Southside's largest andmost complete print shopOffset & letterpressLAYOUT & ARTPHOTO COMPOSITIONOeer 100 typestrtes forbrochures, books, ad books- all your printing needsCeaptete BiaOery indudesgang stitching, perfectbinding, plastic binding, diecutting, embossing, hotstamping, eyeiettmg. tinningI.. * - -- UNIONHU 7-3142 LABELy5832 So. GreenThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 24, 1983—5NewsRev. John Hurley (right) with Cardinal Joseph BernardinHurley to leave CalvertBy Cliff GrammichRev. John Hurley, chaplain of the U of CCatholic student center Calvert House, hasresigned to re-enter parish work.Hurley said, “I have always maintainedthe desire to return some day to parish min¬istry,” and he added that now ‘‘seems likethe right time.” Hurley will thus end 17years of involvement with students at NilesCollege, Northeastern Illinois University,and U of C.Hurley came to the University in 1975,succeeding Rev. Rollins Lambert. Reflect¬ing on his time here, Hurley noticed ‘‘atouch of greatness” by students — ‘‘not justthe greatness that is found in elevated IQ’sand awards and ‘success, ’ but the greatnessmanifested in faith and generosity and ser¬vice in daily living.” Hurley said he is grate¬ful for having encountered U of C’s diversityas he returns to parish ministry. Hurley will be succeeded by Rev. EdwardK. Braxton. A Chicago native, Braxton pre¬pared for the priesthood at Chicago’s Quig¬ley Seminary and St. Mary of the Lake Sem¬inary in Mundelein. Braxton received adoctorate in theology from the Catholic Uni¬versity of Louvain in Belgium.Braxton has served at Holy Name Cathe¬dral, St. Felicitas Church, and Sacred HeartChurch. He first served in campus ministryat Chicago State University. Braxton wasalso assistant chancellor for Theological Af¬fairs in the Diocese of Cleveland and theArchdiocese of Washington, D.C.Braxton has an extended academic ca¬reer. He was the Coolidge Lecturer at Har¬vard Divinity School, a professor of theologyat Notre Dame and Catholic University, andis currently the scholar in residence at theNorth American College in Rome. He is theauthor of The Wisdom Community and nu¬merous scholarly and pastoral articles.State House passes computer grant billAn Illinois House bill which would issueeducational grants for computer programshas passed out of House committee. The billis co-sponsored by State Rep. Carol MoseleyBraun (D-25) and State Rep. Ellis Levin(D-5).The bill authorizes the State Board of Edu¬cation to make grants available to schooldistricts and educational service regions forstaff development, hardware and softwarepurchases, and teacher training. Braun andLevin said that the bill would also providestudents and teachers in non-public schools with an opportunity to participate in similarservices and activities. Braun and Levinsaid that the goal of the program is to pro¬duce self-supporting computer servicesamong Illinois schools.Braun said, ‘‘Personal interest in com¬puters has grown immensely in recent yearsand this legislation addresses the importantneed for computer training and purchase ofadditional hardware and software to keepup with the pace of rapidly advancing tech¬nology.”The bill now goes to the entire House forapproval.WE NEED A SUMMER PHOTOGRAPHER!• To take weekly assignments• To develop photosInterested? Call or come by:The CHICAGO MAROONIda Noyes Hall • Room 303962-95556—The Chicago Maroon—-Friday, June 24,1983 Softball registration openThe summer softball league is gearing upfor its opening day of play July 5. Registra¬tion is open to all interested but is run on afirst-come first-served basis. It is advisableto register as soon as possible since leaguesize may be limited. The deadline for regis¬tration is Tuesday.All applications require a $15 fee andshould be submitted to Kevin McCarthy inRoom 105 of the Field House between 8:45a.m. and 4:15 p.m. Monday through Fri¬day.A mandatory meeting for all registeredteams will be in the Trophy Room at Bart¬lett Gymnasium Wednesday at 6 p.m. Everyteam registered must have a representativepresent with a team roster and a $100 entryfee in hand.The season will run for six weeks and willhave one full week of playoffs. Games willbe at 5 p.m. and 6:15 p.m. Monday throughFriday, and at 1 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. Satur¬days. The league will offer men’s, women’sand co-ed divisions with the stipulation thatco-ed teams play at least 40 percent womenin the field and at bat.It is recommended that team members di¬vide up and share the burden of the $115 infees. New students and visiting summer stu¬dents are especially encouraged to join theleague.Police seek rapistPolice are investigating the June 7 rape ofa woman in her apartment on the 5400 blockof Cornell. The rapist entered the apartmentby cutting the screen of an unlocked win¬dow, and attacked the woman in her livingroom.Take • Wj. stock Vsin America. TheChicagoMaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the officialstudent newspaper of the Universityof Chicago. It is published on Fridaysduring the summer. Editorial andbusiness offices are located on thethird floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, 60637.Anna FeldmanEditorCliff GrammichNews EditorLinda LeeProduction ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerChris ScottAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerStaff: Wally Dabrowski, DonHaslam,Sondra Krueger, Deborah Lutter-beckCalendarFRIDAYSAO: Registration for eclectic ed continues Rm 210INH.U.C. Folkdancers Parking Lot Dance: General folk¬dancing 8 p.m. - midnight. INH.Hillel: Special Shabbat Dinner 7:30 p.m. $3 Sign upat Hillel Info 752-1127.SOQ Films: 2Q01: A Space Odyssey 7 & 9:30 p.m.Cobb $2.SATURDAY companied by Hemalatta, vocals and Aiyappan,mridangams (drums) 7:30 p.m. $4/$3 (students) Info:753-2274.MONDAYU.C. Gymnastics Club: Last day to register, begin¬ning gymnastics for adults. 5:30 p.m. Bartlett Gym$20.Microbiology Dept.: Ph.D. Defense by Deno P. Dia-lynas: “Antigen-Specific Delivery of the Lethal Hitby Murine Cytolytic T Lymphocytes” 1 p.m. CLSC1117A City Enthralled Arts Revue: Darlene Blackburn,dancer 9 p.m. Blue Gargoyle. $3 at door $2 in ad¬vance. Call 667-4285.Oriental Institute Children’s Gallery Tour: “Lion &Sheep" 10 - Noon. $15 parent/child fee includes artproject. Pre-registration required. Call 962-9507.SOQ Films: The Wind and the Lion (where TeddyRoosevelt is inaccurately portrayed as a Democrat)7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Cobb $2.SUNDAYU.C. Women’s Soccer Club: Quel Bogue vs. Olym¬pics 10 a.m. Jackson Park.Oriental Institute: Egypt Gift of the Nile (a quotefrom Herodotus) 2 p.m. Breasted Hall Free.DOC: Seventh Seal 8 p.m. Cobb $2. *Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion 9 a.m.; University Religious Service,Scott O. Stapleton presiding, 11 a.m.I-House: Classical Dance of South India Bhar ataNatyam Recital bu Jennifer Prema Savarirayan ac¬ TUESDAYSAO NOONTIME CONCERT: Freddie Haque Trio12 p.m. Hutch Court. FREEDOC: The Missouri Breaks 8 p.m. cobb $‘\WEDNESDAYU.C. Gymnastics Club; Registration contin¬ues for beginning gymnastics. Bartlett Gym.$20.SOQ Films: Citizen Kane 8 p.m. Cobb $2.THURSDAYSAO NOONTIME CONCERT: Alexander andNoelle 12 p.m. Hutch Court FREE.Oriental Institute: Last Day of photographic exhibit“The House on the Nile: 50 Years of Chicago Houseat Luxor” 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. FREE.3LSF: Only Angels Have Wings 8:30 p.m. LawSchool Aud. $2.Classified AdsCLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and SI for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publica¬tion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACE1 bedroom available Aug 1 in spacious 2-bedroom apartment on 58th st. Prefer non-smoker graduate student, male or female. CallLibby 241-5207 after 6:30 pm.COOP FOR SALETwo bedrm., 1 bath coop 58th St. & Blackstone.Located in a well maintained 3 story walkup.$49,500. Call Mr. Wardian, 493-2525 Parker-Holsman Co.CONDOMINIUMTwenty-four hour security desk clerk & luxuryliving in a traditional Hyde Park setting. AHampton House, 1 bedrm. condo provides thisand more for a price of $43,750. For furtherdetails, Call 493-2525. Ask for Mr. WardianParker-Holsman Co.CHICAGOBEACH APTS.5100 S. Cornell Ave.Offers comfortable living at reasonable price.Newly remodeled kitchen. Some apts. offersview of the lake 8. downtown. 24 hr. security, ’/2block from bus & train. Available for inspec¬tion from 10 am to 6pm. 1 bedrm. $380/mo eft.$280/mo. All rents include utilities. Call 493-7896 or Parker-Holsman Co 493-2525.Hyde Park Blvd nr Kimbark 7 rm-4 br/nrShopsTrans/cpt (heat, hot water) quiet $600.752-51465405 S. Woodlawn 2 Rm 3 Rm Apts, furnished643-2760 or 667-5746 Mrs. Green.Beautiful Sublet, large bedroom in 2 bdrm apt.Completely renovated last fall. All new wall towall crp, appliances (incl. microwave, elec,oven dshwshr. etc), fixtures, etc Compl. fur¬nished. Free central a/c, free util. Great viewof downtown + lake. Quiet and secure (door¬man) A steal at $195 (negot) Call 798-0527 or955-6034 anytime.SUMMER SUBLET 54th & HARPER Bdrm inIrge 3 bdrm apt. Fully furnished $135/mo. 324-5357Bright 4 bdrm 2 bath apt 52nd + Kimbark. Sunroom, sun porch, formal dining. $700. Purchaseoption. 684-5030 by 8:30 am or 955-93557 RM. VINTAGE KENWOOD CONDO. 3 bdrm.2 bth. Ige., sunny, built-in bkcse., cabinets,wbfpl Ige. closets, modernized kit., Idry. fac. inbldg., storage space. Avail 7/1/83 $705/mo.Call 861-1179 or 324-511656th & Harper avail, now. 2 bdrms, Irge. kitch.,w/all mod. appl., Ivng. & din. rms. beautif.hdwd. firs., a/c, sunny bk. porch, wlking dist &heat. $575. Ray 890-9390.4 room Co op Apts. Price: middle 20 D's; mon¬thly assessments: lower $200's Within twoblocks of the Law School, Ida Noyes, School ofEducation, and within 1 block of the RegionalReserve Library. For appointmt call 324-8768Very Nice Furnished Room-Kitchen priv. NonSmoker 955-7083Own room in sunny apt near campus-nonsmoker summer possible fall option $140-684 5498, 599-2012 (day)-SheilaSummer sublet room for rent kitchenprivileges utility room washer drier 55th andHarper Call evening 324-3484 LADY PREFERRED.PERSONAL COMPUTERS—Sales, Education, Service,Computers, printers, modems and supplies.AUTHORIZED KAYPRO DEALERVALUE ADDED SYSTEMS1701 E. 53rd Street 752-7362 1 br apt on Midway available mid-July Call 2884585 after 7pm.1 br apt on Midway available mid-August Call493-6780 after 5 pmONE BEDROOM + studio apts $220-$295. stu¬dent rate avail. 684-5030 by 8:30 am or 493-2329pmSummer sublet, large furnished room in groupapt next to Harper Court. Available now thrumid September. Rent $150/mo. Call 955-0729.SPACE WANTEDResponsible Couple MD PhD seek apartmentor house-sitting opportunity for 1983-84 after6:pm 955-6462Rutgers professor w/family needs 2 bdrm aptto sublet July 5 - Aug 13. Call 324-5939 or 201-2490431.KARATE CLASSESM + F 7:15pm $20 Ida Noyes beginners classstarts 6/27 register in Rm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554AFRICAN DANCEM + W 5:15pm $25 Ida Noyes classes start 6/27register in Rm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554.BALLET CLASSESM + W 5:15pm $35 Ida Noyes classes start 6/27register in Rm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554.JAZZ DANCE CLASSM+W at 6:15pm $35 Ida Noyes classes start6/27 register in Rm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554BELLY DANCE CLASSTuesdays at 5:15pm $15 Ida Noyes classes start6/28 register in Rm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554MODERN DANCECLASSTuesdays+Thursdays 2 level 5:15pm Beg. +6:15pm Intermed. $35 International HouseAssembly Hall Classes start 6/28 Register inRm 210 Ida Noyes962-9554.PUB HOURSAND MOVIES4:30-1:20, Mon-Fri. Happy Hour, 4:30-6:30Movies, 7+11 M-ANNIE HALL, Tues-CLOCKWORK ORANGE, Wed-LENNY,Thurs-RICHARD PRYOR LIVE ON SUNSETSTR IP. Members, 21 + .ELLA FITZGERALDtickets now available for Ella Fitzgerald &Oscar Peterson Concert at Ravinia July 28.Lawn Ticket only $4.50 Lawn Ticket & RoundTrip Bus Ticket only $7.50 Come to Rm 210 IdaNoyes 962-9554.LEARN TO ROWThe University of Chicago Coed Crew Team isonce again offering learn to row sessions. In¬terested? Come to INH Thurs. June 30 at 7:30pm or call Gordy Williams at 446 2366 leave 4COMPUTER BLUESSuffering From Cluster-Phobia? ComputerTerminal Blues? Tired of waiting for a com¬puter terminal? Tired of having people lookingover your shoulder when you do get one? Tiredof getting bumped off a terminal just beforeyou find the treasure? Why not own your own?For only $745 you can own an Esprit III deskTop terminal, guaranteed completely compatiable with TeleVideo 925/950 used at CompCenter and campus clusters-on both Amdahl &DEC. Explore the depths of SPSS, or writeyour dissertation in your own living room oranywhere you have a telephone jack. You get afull size, typewriter style keyboard, 12” greenphosphor tube, printer port, programmablefunction keys. We also have other quality ter¬minals from $543, low-cost printers & modemsfor teleworking. For more information callIverson at Information Systems 228-5480.TIME$AVERSThe Communication ProfessionalsDocument Preparation, Manuscripts,Theses, Term Papers,Word Processing & IBM Selectrics"Your Deadline Is Our Timetable"470-0231 CITY ENTHRALLEDREVUEAward winning revue of song, dance, music,poetry. AN URBAN DELIGHT! BlueGargoyle, Sat. June 25, 9pm, 5655 S. Universi¬ty. $3. MOVING & HAULING. Discount Prices.Free-Packing Service. Free—Estimates.Free—Packing boxes & crates delivered. N/C.Free—Padding & dollies. References. Call Bill493 9122.PROF. TYPIST. Large or small jobs. Com¬petitive prices. 324-5943, 752-6972, 667 4285.GYMNASTIC CLASSESADULT BEGINNERS CLASS meets Mon &Thur, 5:30 PM, Bartlett Gym. Start 6/27.$20/Qtr. Gym pass reqd. Dennis 962-1524d. 955-8627e.COMPUTATION CENTERFREE CLASSES FORSUMMERQUARTERSThe Computation Center is once again offeringa series of free seminars on computing topicsto the University community for summerquarter. These seminars began on June 20 andcontinue through the end of July. A freeschedule of these seminars and courses isavailable from the Center at the following locations: Usite Business Office (Wieboldt 310),from 10:30 to 2:00, Monday - Friday; MainBusiness Office (Merriam 164, 1313 E. 60th),from 8:30 to 4:30, Monday - Friday and at theStaff Office Building (5737 S. University), 8:30to 5:00, Monday - Friday. Copies of theschedule may also be obtained from the SocialScience Advisor in Pick 123, the Program Advisor in Usite and the Terminal Attendant inUsite. The seminars include introductions tothe MVS operating system and the ACF2security package on the IBM 3081 computer, afive-part course on the MUSE word processingsystem on the DECSYSTEM 20 computers aswell as other introductory topics.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700."Mail Box Cash” a new look on loans by mail,legitimate work at home programs, how tomake fantastic gains in over the counter stocketc. Satisfaction guaran. Send $15.00 toTheodore Banks, Automated Business Consul¬tant P.O. Box 178 DeKalb, III 60115APARTMENT SALE Very nice furniture ingood condition: dsk, bkshlvs, ding tble, chrs,couch, drssrs, lamp, cbints, rugs. SAT 24 +SUN 25 June llam-6pm. 5428 S. Kimbark apt2F. 643 5008PEOPLE WANTEDBabysitter part time for our 6yr-old 955-2148 Looking for childcare? Infant + toddlerchildcare available. 7 years experience. Largeplayroom and lots to interest your child. Out¬door experiences. Judy Zurbrigg 684-2820.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Reasonable 684-6882.VEGETARIAN INDIAN COOKING-Learn tocook & plan complete menus call 363-3684classes begin July 1.PERSONALS”25” years old and I'm currently in prison. Iwould like to correspond with any sincere per¬son. Write: Percy L. Bacon P.O. Box 607 Car-son City, Nv. 89701.SCENESADULT LEARN TO SWIM CLASSES July 5th- August 23rd, 7:30 - 8:30 p.m. at Ida Noyes HallPool. All levels of swimmers welcome.LOSTAND FOUNDLost eyeglasses 6/21/83 bifocals vie Harper-Admin 752-7671 eves.P HOTOG RAPHYSTUDIOPortraits, Weddings, and Special Events arenow being booked by Hyde Park's newest por¬trait studio. Call and speak with Ron Milewskiat The Better Image.1344 E. 55th St. 643-6262ALLEYSALEMulti-family sale lot's of usable household, an¬tiques + junk, typewriters, waffle iron, yogurtmaker, etc. Prints, posters, kitchen stuff.Saturday June 25, 10 a m. - 3 p.m. 1121 E. 54thSt. Alley between Greenwood and University.PUB HOURSAND MOVIES4:30-1:20, Mon-Fri. Happy Hours, 4:30-6:30Movies, 7+11. M-ANNIE HALL, Tues-CLOCKWORK ORANGE, Wed-LENNY,Thurs RICHARD PRYOR LIVE ON SUNSETSTRIP Members, 21 + .HAVE A BALL!Co-ed softball team needs opponent on summerSundays. Mornings preferred Interested? Call752-1127(9-5): 241-6887 (eves)Reliable student or mother wanted for part-time. Summer childcare 493-8195.Waiters - Waitresses - Cooks Part-time or Full-Time. $2.00/hour for Waiters/Waitresses. Tipsaverage $4.00 $6.00/hour. Cooks $4 00 + depen¬ding on experience. Loop restaurant. 263-5732Terry or 332-2200 MaggieSERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417. CLASSICALINDIAN DANCEBharat Natyam Recital by Jennifer PremaSavarirayan accompanied by guest musiciansfrom India Sunday, June 26 7:30 pm at 1-House1414 E . 59th call 753-2274 or 2270 for infoAEROBIC DANCEM + W at 5:15pm Ida Noyes $25 classes start6/27 Register in Rm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554Passport photos while you wait. On campus.Other services available. 962-6263.FLOYD'S DECORATIVE SERVICEInterior & Exterior Very Neat & ProfessionalBest references Very Reasonable Over 20years In The Hyde Park Kenwood Area CALLFLOYD 221-5661I enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372 JAMNASTICSTues. Thurs & Fri. at 5:15pm $17.50, $35. or$52.50 Ida Noyes classes start 6/27 register inRm 210 Ida Noyes 962-9554.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 24, 1983—71Start June 27th. Registernow until July 1st in Rm210 Ida Noyes.Aerobic Dance - $25/12 sessions - mondays & Wednesdays 5:15pmAfrican Dance - $25/12 sessions - mondays & Wednesdays 6:30pmBeg. Ballet - $35/12 sessions - mondays & Wednesdays 5:00pmBeg. Jazz - $35/12 sessions * mondays & Wednesdays 6:15 pmBelly Dancing - $15/6 sessions - tuesdays 5:15pmJamnastics - $17.50/6 sessions - tuesdays, thursdays & fridays5:15pmKarate - $20/12 sessions - mondays & Wednesdays 7:15pmModem Dance - $35/12 sessions - tuesdays & thursdays 5:00pmModem Dance II - $35/12 sessions - tuesdays & thursdays 6:15pm(payment must be made at time of registration by check only please) SOQ & DOC filmsnow playing on Tuesday,Wednesday, Friday,Saturday & select Sundays inair conditioned Cobb Hall-all Shows $2. Film seasonruns through August 20th.cream at theIda Noyes Bakery!!Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 9am-8pmalso featuring fresh pastry.Lunch & Dinner at TheFrog & Peach Restaurant!!Summer Hours Mon.-Sat.11:30am "8pmHappy Hour & Beyondat the PUB!!!Summer Hours Mon.-Fri.4:30pm-1:30am Friday 6/24Saturday 6/25Sunday 6/26Tuesday 6/28Wednesday 6/29Frida* 7/1Saturday 7/2Tuesday 7/5Wednesday 7/6Friday 7/8Saturday 7/9Sunday 7/10Tuesday 7/12Wednesday 7/13 The Wind & the Lion 7:15 & 9pm2001: A Space Odyssey 7pm & 9:30pmThe Seventh SealThe Missouri BreaksCitizen KaneBreaking AwayThiefAn American in ParisLawrence of ArabiaLove & DeathApocalypse Now!The Bicycle ThiefThe Mackintosh ManAfter the Fox 8pm8pm8pm7:15pm & 9:15pm7:15pm & 9:30pm8pm8pm7:15pm & 9pm7pm & 10pm8pm8pm8pm(for continued listings watch for postersor pick up a schedule at a film showing)Free Noon time Concerts inHutchinson Court everyTuesday & Thursday thruAugust 18th (if rain, concerts willbe held in Reynolds Club NorthLounge)6/28 - The Freddy Haque Trio - avant garde jazz6/30 - Alexander & Noelle - folk & pop7/5 - TBA7/7 - The Balkan Rhythm Band - jazz fusion7/12 - Roberto Clemente High School Steel Band - Caribbean Steel Drums7/14 - Russian Folk Ensemble7/19 - Peggy & Brian Hyland - Irish & Scottish ballads, sea shanties7/21 - Akio Sasajima Trio - jazz guitar7/26 - Lin Shook Dance - modem dance performance(for continued listings watch maroon ads or pick upthe SAO summer calendar in RM210)SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS9BSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSTHE STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE(SAO) IS LOCA TED IN RM. 210 IDA NOYESHALL. BUSINESS HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm.Cali 962-9554 — Activities Line: 753-2150 * SPECIAL RAVINIAFESTIVAL DISCOUNTS ON\LAWN — TICKETSAVAILABLE NOW:: j:i: ELLA FITZGERALDIOSCAR PETER,,, N :TUESDAY JUNE 28THJUDY COLI INS/LEO KOTTKEWEDNESDAY JULY 13THj: PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BANDWEDNESDAY JULY 27THTickets on sale after July 13subject to availability. LawnTickets are only $4.50. LawnTicket plus round trip bustransportation only $7.50.Tickets available atInternational House and SAORm 210 IDA NOYES IIALL.