grey city MaroonVIDEO WAR GAMES— cover The Programpage fiveThe Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 4 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, July 15, 1983Hodel to decide on Argonne bidPHOTO BY KAREN AXTSupreme Jewelers, where an attempted robbery ended ina shooting Wednesday.Hold-up attempt failsBy Don KaslamAn off-duty city policeman shotand killed one of three men at¬tempting to rob Supreme Jewelersat 1452 E. 53rd St. Wednesday. Theother two men fled after the unsuc¬cessful robbery attempt.An unidentified store employeesaid that the group walked into thestore with handguns, announcedthe holdup and headed five cus¬tomers and all the employees, in¬cluding off-duty policeman RonnieWatson, into a back room. The bur¬glars apparently planned to robthem first and then take store mer¬chandise. Watson, however,dressed in plain clothes* fired atone of the three.Watson, a plainclothes securityguard and an off-duty city police¬man was in the display window ofthe store when the robbers en¬tered. Watson was the first personthe robbers saw, and was held at gunpoint immediately.Watson was carrying a five-shot.38 calibre pistol in an ankle hol¬ster when he was forced to kneelon the ground along with the cus¬tomers being held. He fired all fiveshots at one robber at point blankrange, hitting him in the chest withthree.After the shooting in the back ofthe store, a robber in the front ofthe store fled. The third robber hadno gun, and pleaded with Watsonnot to shoot him. While Watsonbent down to pick up the gun of therobber that had been shot, theother robber fled.The store employee also saidthat the group was believed to be apart of a still arger ring that hasrobbed 11 other jewelry stores inthe last year. City police would notconfirm this suspicion, but did feelthat the store had been watchedbefore the crime took place. By Bill EjzakOvert competition between theArgonne National Laboratory andthe Southeastern Universities Re¬search Association (SURA) forfederal funding to construct andoperate a proposed 4-billion-elec¬tron-volt <GeV) electron accelera¬tor ended recently with SURA’sJuly 12 presentation to DonaldHodel, secretary of the Depart¬ment of Energy (DOE).What remains is for the secre¬tary to sort out a tangled skein ofarguments and make his decision,which will be made public withinthe next month.Argonne, SURA, and three othercontenders submitted proposals inJanuary of this year for the accel¬erator, which will be the most pow¬erful tool ever built for nuclearphysics.The National Science AdvisoryCommittee (NSAC) reviewed theproposals. In April, it recommend¬ed that the SURA plan be imple¬mented.Argonne’s Board of Governors,after considering the committee’sfull report, believed that the com¬mittee had erred. Since then, Ar¬gonne officials have pressed tohave one of two options which itmaintains are superior to theNSAC recommendation adopted.The first option is for DOE tobuild GEM (the Argonne design)at the Argonne site in southwestsuburban Westmont as Argonneinitially proposed. In defense ofthis option. Walter Massey, Ar¬gonne’s director, has called atten¬tion to some of the NSAC panel’sfindings and has challenged thepanel’s reasons for its decision.The NSAC panel stated that Ar¬gonne’s and SURA's proposals“are feasible... either could verywell form the basis for an extreme¬ly powerful national facility.’’In recommending the SURA pro¬ posal, the panel expressed doubtsabout Argonne’s design. Masseyattempted to erase those doubts bymaking additional calculationsand experimental evidence avail¬able.xMoreover, the panel justified itsrecommendation by citing SURA’spledge to establish new professor¬ships in nuclear physics and bynoting features of the SURA designwhich make it technically superi¬or.Massey responded that“W’herever this facility is located,it will generate new faculty posi¬tions.” He also maintained thatthose features which make theSURA design superior “fall out¬side the initially stated criteria.”But despite these arguments tohave the Argonne design built atArgonne, informed sources con¬nected with the National Laborato¬ry7 have said they believe that thatoutcome is unlikely.So Argonne officials have alsopushed to have the SURA designbuilt by Argonne at the Argonnesite.In following this route. DOEwould abide by its own Energy Re¬search Advisory Board which rec¬ommended in 1982 that no newDOE laboratories be built, andBy Cliff GrammichThree candidates in the Demo¬cratic primary campaign for the1st Congressional District seathave sharply criticized MayorHarold Washington for implyingthat allies of the “Vrdolyak 29”City Council bloc are backing op¬ponents of Charles Hayes, Wash¬ington’s choice for the post. StateRep. Larry Bullock accused Wash¬ington of lowering the level of the that existing labs (of which Ar¬gonne is one) should be given“those new tasks for which new la¬boratories might otherwise be es¬tablished.”Geography also favors buildingthe approved design at Argonne.The University of Chicago andO’Hare airport are easily accessi¬ble from Argonne. SURA proposedto build its accelerator at NewportNews, Va., which is not near amajor university or an internation¬al aiport. NSAC’s final reporturged SURA to consider a dif¬ferent location.Sources at Argonne report thatSURA’s officials decided to staywith the Newport News site.Finally, Argonne supportersclaim that building and operatingthe accelerator at Argonne willsave $42 million dollars during thelifetime of the accelerator.But SURA opposes having Ar¬gonne build and operate its designHarry Holmgren, SURA president,in a letter to Science Magazine.July 8. wrote: “It would be tragicin consequences if (SURA’s; effortwere subverted and ... (SURA’s)winning design were awarded to alaboratory that was unsuccessfulin the competition.”PHOTO BY KAREN AXTLarry Bullockcampaign; State Sen. CharlesChew was “furiousand AidMarian Humes expressed dismayover the “unscrupulous” charges.At a rally for Haves last Satur¬day, Washington noted that someof his allies, including 2nd WardAid. Bobby Rush and 5th WardAid. Larry Bloom, were “bankroll¬ing” Hayes’ campaign, whileWashington's opponents, includingallies of 10th Ward Aid. Edward RVrdolyak. were supporting Hayes'opponents. Although Washingtondid not specify which candidateswere receiving support from Vrdo-lvak allies, some political analystshave speculated that Vrdolyak hasaided the campaigns of Humes andBullock.continued on page eightCallaway to run new journalism programBy Nina LubellThe William Benton FellowshipProgram in broadcast journalismwill begin this fall under the direc¬torship of John D. Callaway, anoted broadcast journalist.The program, sponsored by theWilliam Benton Foundation, willgive professional radio and televi¬sion journalists an opportunity toincrease knowledge of fundamen¬tal issues in such areas as econom¬ics, political science and medicine.The eight fellows will take fourcourses in two quarters at the Uni¬versity and they will attend semi¬nars to discuss important ques¬tions in broadcast journalism.Faculty and outside journalistswill guest lecture at these semi¬nars. The eight Fellows will devel¬op individual programs of coursework with the aid of a faculty advi¬sor. The Faculty Advisory Com¬mittee is chaired by Barry D.Karl, the Norman and Edna Freehling Professor of History.The Faculty Advisory Commit¬tee was also partly responsible forthe selection of the fellows. Thenames of the fellows are as of yetunreleased; however, Barry Karlsaid that the applicant pool wasnot just national but worldwide.In addition to the Faculty Advi¬sory Committee, a National Advi¬sory Committee was instrumentalin developing the program and se¬lecting fellows. This committeewas chaired by John Chancellor ofNBC News, and members includedother leading broadcasters such asLeslie Stahl and Gordon Sauter.Callaway, the overall director ofthe program, was also a memberof the National Advisory Commit¬tee.Callaway’s list of credentials isextensive. He presently works forWTTW, Chicago’s public televisionstation and his program “JohnCallaway Interviews,” entering its second year, is nationally distri¬buted. He has won three Emmys inJohn D. Callaway the past five years, and the Pea¬body Award. He has worked forCBS radio and television, and forWBBM, in addition to PBS. He haswritten extensively and has lec¬tured across the nation.Callaway explained that his po¬sition as director was not yet clear-cut because the program was justbeginning, but his position would“evolve over time” and be “colla¬borative with the faculty.” He willhelp develop the seminar andmight occasionally speak as aguest.The program is similar to theNeiman Fellowship Program atHarvard University, except thatthat program is for print journal¬ism. The University of Chicagoabout 10 years ago had an urbanreporting program. The new pro¬gram here for broadcast journal¬ism is probably the first of its kindanywhere, according to both Cal¬laway and Karl.Pols criticize mayorWORSHIP & READING OF EICHA(Book of Lamentations)Monday - July 18: Upstairs Minyan (Conservative)8:30 p.m.Yavneh (Orthodox) 8:30 p.m.Tuesday - July 19: Yavneh 7:00 a.m. & 7:30 a.m.CHEVROLETFor further information call: 752-1127Hillel House * 5715 S. Woodlawn AveRuby Chevrolet and General Motors Acceptance Corporationhas formulated a special plan to help all of you recentgraduates finance your new car. Even if you have no credithistory or are just starting a new job, Ruby Chevrolet andGMAC will work for you and with you to get you into the newChevrolet of your choice! So stop in at Ruby today and enjoy!• LOW GMAC RATES• A HUGE INVENTORY OF NEW CHEVROLETS• FRIENDLY, HELPFUL SALES AND SERVICE PERSONEL Suhuk0i ok the Quoad - 111SOQ FILM PRESENTSFriday July 15 The Howling Qoe Dante) 7:15 p.m. & 9 p.m.Saturday July 16 Cutter’s Way (Ivan Passer) 7:15 p.m. & 9:30 p.mTuesday July 19 Meet John Doe (Frank Capra) 8 p.m.Wednesday July 20 Laura (Otto Preminger) 8 p.m.Friday July 22 My Bodyguard (Tony Bill) 7:15 p.m. & 9:15 p.m.All Films shown in COBB HALL$2.00 admission(Pick up a complete souvenir film guide FREE at show)The AFFORDABLEILLION DOLLAR LOOK SUBMIT TO.The Chicago Literary Review• Reviews• Poetry• ArtDeadline September 7th, Issue date September 23rdContact Campbell McGrath-962-9555Look like a million without investing a fortune. TheHAIR PERFORMERS offer you a hair design that'sworth its weight in gold. At a remarkably lowpnGe $5.00 OFFCDCPI A I nCCCD COMPLETE HAIR SHAPING AND STYLING CSPECIAL OFFER -QO/ qFF dfRMS4 rh- H,-» ■ Per for mers, 1983; ; ■&?**£#*The Chicago Maroon-Friday. July II*CALL:684-04007234 STONY *r|4.h-I•: ;/.II■i}ii’-i:?::: i>?:[[I!Crossroad conferenceCrossroads International Student Centeris hosting a conference of the Inter-CulturalAssociation from July 22 to July 27. Classesand regular program activities will not beheld during this period. An outing to GreekTown has been scheduled for July 23 in lieuof the regular dinner. For more informa¬tion, call 684-6060.Hearing on tobaccoThe Illinois Interagency Council on Smok¬ing and Disease will sponsor a Congressio¬nal Public Hearing on the Federal tobaccosupport program July 18. CongressmanCharles Rose (D-North Carolina), the chair¬man of the Subcommittee on Tobacco andPeanuts, and of the Committee on Agricul¬ture, will chair the meeting. The hearingwill be in the Palmer House Hotel Confer¬ence Center 7, on the 7th floor, at 17 E.Monroe St., from 9 a.m. until noon.Computer classesThe Museum of Science and Industry willpresent computer classes during July andAugust. Registration will be taken for eitherclasses meeting weekly or five consecutiveweeks, or for classes meeting Mondaythrough Friday in a single week. The classeswill emphasize skills for using the computeras a tool for problem-solving and for in¬creasing logical thinking and creativity.The Museum’s computer laboratory isequipped with 25 microcomputers. During aclass, students will have the exclusive use ofa computer. Participants will be en¬couraged to move through the program attheir own pace, and they may progressthrough seven levels of proficiency as pro¬gramming skills are developed.Those enrolling may take additionalclasses after the first course. Tuition for theinitial class is $72.10 for Museum members and $77.10 for non-members. The chargesfor additional five-class courses are $40 formembers and $45 for non-members. For fur¬ther information, call 684-1414.The Hyde Park Jewish Community Center(HPJCC) will also present a class on “Stra¬tegies for Computer Literacy’’ July 25 andAugust 1 at HPJCC, 1100 E. Hyde ParkBlvd.The two-session class will aid the laymanin understanding and achieving “computerliteracy.” The class will emphasize strate¬gies for “self-learning.” Richard M. Rubin,the assistant survey director at the NationalOpinion Research Center, will teach theclass.Registration deadline is July 22. The feefor the class is $15 per person, and a dis¬count will be given to HPJCC members. Forfurther information, contact Roberta Siegelat 268-4600.Study of micro-orgsThe Chicago Academy of Sciences is of¬fering a field trip through Lincoln Park July16 to study micro-organisms. The group willmeet in the Academy parking lot, 2001 N.Clark St., at 9 a.m. and spend the morningin the park collecting samples from ponds,trees, and buildings. The afternoon will bespent at McCrone Laboratories, examiningthe finds under microscopes with the aid ofprofessionals. Cost is $4 for members and $6for non-members. For further information,call 549-0606.I could have dancedThe Hyde Park Jewish Community Center(HPJCC) will offer four instructionalballroom dance classes for couples at theHPJCC, 1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd., from8-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays, July 19 and 26, andAugust 2 and 9.Dance instructor Vince Samar will leadthe classes, which feature American“Deftly paced . . . some very bright performances.” - Syse, Sun-TimesTrim & snappy little production —Christiansenjnbunet<5> 333333333tfeloipi^Fhxluk&Koft/round^BOUNU^!a GARDEN iDu&tidtyOoiifOstujtcler fye*t<7*t23,19837lwMtiopt&oupL&rfud^d8fm'S<*h^d3fm<>Ml7fmlio/ids $7$9 n —hwrtM UfawThwMhr and Sunday pa>fo««nancaa7k rtuudfaioM962-7300 Mjtj/HiifaaM/iuxqpCd2 for 1 Sunday if you bring a plant!677^ <Sc unuKrsHu Hird m# mi sd vti mu w vu w w w wire s* tnt mi nnw mi mi wi ia# m* m# mi ballroom dancing in July, and Latinballroom dancing in August. A fox trot classwill be July 19, and swing/jitterbug will bepresented July 26. The cha cha class will beAugust 2, and the rhumba class will be Au¬gust 9.Registration must be received prior to aclass, and is available for individualclasses. The fees are $15 per couple for eachclass, and HPJCC members will receive adiscount. Registration is limited. To regis¬ter or for additional information, call268-4600.Trip to Great AmericaThe Junior Auxiliary of the Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club will sponsor a trip toMarriott’s Great America July 30. A bus willleave from the Club, 5480 S. Kenwood, at9:30 a.m. and return at 11:30 p.m. The costfor the trip, including transportation and ad¬mission, is $16. Reservations must be madeby July 18, and can be made at the Club orby calling 643-4062. Children under 13 yearsof age must be accompanied by a parent oranother responsible adult.CTU board electedThe Catholic Theological Union (CTU)has announced the election of five newmembers to its board of trustees. The newmembers are Michael J. Birck; Rev. DavidBrecht, OSA; Michael Igoe; Sister Ann IdaGannon, BVM; and Patricia Hogue Wer-hane.Birck was a founder of Tellabs, Inc., andhas been that firm's president and chief ex¬ecutive officer. Brecht is currently the prin¬cipal of St. Rita High School. Igoe is an at¬torney, who currently serves as Secretaryto the Cook County Board of Commission¬ers. Gannon was president of MundeleinCollege for 18 years, and is currently a pro¬fessor of philosophy there. Werhane is anassociate professor of philosophy and an as¬ News in briefsociate dean at Loyola University’s Collegeof Arts and Sciences.CTU, located at 5401 S. Cornell Ave. inHyde Park, is the largest Catholic graduateschool of theology in the United States.Your baby’s first yearThe Hyde Park Jewish Community Centerwill present a program on “You and YourBaby: Building a Relationship Through theFirst Year,” Thursday at 8 p.m. in theCenter at 1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd. The pro¬gram will focus on the baby’s psychologicaland developmental needs.The program will be conducted by MyraLeifer, co-director of the University’sParent-Infant Development Service and aclinical psychologist; Donna Spiker, a deve¬lopmental psychologist; and Laurie Le-venthal-Belfer, an infant specialist.Reservations are requested by July 15.Members will be admitted free, and guestsare welcome. For further information, call268-4600.Lake Michigan studyThe Shedd Aquarium is offering multiplesession summer workshops for 9 to 14-year-old students.The one-week course “Lake Michigan Ad¬venture" for 12- to 14-year-olds is offeredfrom July 18 through July 22. Plant, animaland water samples will be collected in an ef¬fort to provide a better understanding of thebiological niche that is Lake MichiganFor “gifted and motivated" 9-to 12-year-olds, Shedd offers "An Introduction toAquatic Science.” In addition to takingsamples, this program will involve dissec¬tion and animal behavior experiments. Thecourse for 9- and 10-year-olds is set for Au¬gust 2-4 and from August 23-25 for 11- and 12-year-olds.There is a fee for each workshop and eachrequires registration. Call the Aquarium ed¬ucation department at 939-2426.ODOMANKOMA KYEREMACULTURAL TROUPEINTERNATIONAL CHILDRENS DANCE THEATREFrom Ghana, West AfricaSunday, July 17 - 4:00 p.m.Friday, July 22 - 7:00 p.m.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE1414 E. 59th St.Tickets: Adults $5.00 Call 753-2274Children $2.50 For informationThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 1983—3LetterNorth sider advocates ‘unmolested use’ of RTAJacques Van Der Ven and I had just seenTalley's Folly at the Court Theater, whichconcluded at 9:30 that Sunday, July 10,1983.we waited forty-five minutes for a 55thStreet bus to take us to the 55th Street ele¬vated stop (off King Drive) where we ar¬rived at approximately 10:45. While I wasjust outside the el station, a young, short,white-shirted black teen-ager forciblygrabbed by wallet and ran away into thealley behind the station.Jacques and I, joined by a friend of Jac¬ques’ named Marlin, tried to retrieve thewallet by offering $7 (all he had) to two kidswho said that they could get it back. I hadalready assured them that there was noth¬ing valuable in it except to me, besides the$50 and the CTA monthly pass. It was worththe risk to get it back, but the kids never re¬turned with it. Meanwhile. I had called 911and been told that the police would send acar. Twenty minutes or so elapsed.Earlier I had also tried to establish con¬tact through the intercom and closed circuitT V. cameras inside the station. But insteadwe heard a loud garbled comment in which Icould only make out the word ••platform”and then suddenly the speakers erupted inan air raid siren alert that forced everyoneoutside the station and into the street.When outside. Jacques and I were slowlysurrounded by a group of black teenagerswho seemed angry that he had given twoothers $7. They muttered things about Rea¬gan. Someone warned Jacques he was aboutto be attacked, but it was too late. Theyjumped on him after he entered the el sta¬tion. pushing him and punching him repea¬tedly as they spread-eagled him over theturnstiles, Jacques tried to throw his walletto me but it landed away from me. and any¬way I couldn’t have grabbed it and rushedup to the platform, leaving him alone tofight off 6 punks. Marlin tried to stop themto no avail. They took Jacques’ wallet,watch and ring. They eventually ran off butnot because any police had arrived duringthe twenty-five minutes or so, from eitherthe street or the platform.The three of us rushed upstairs, jumpedinto a northbound el train and told our storyto the motorman. He radioed the police and they said we should get off at 51st Street. Wedidn’t want to. We wanted to get the hell outof there as quickly as possible. (By the way,Marlin kindly loaned us money to ride theel.) But we decided to do what the policesuggested: there was at least an agent onduty at 51st; no one was on duty anywhereat 55th, so anything was possible and noth¬ing preventable.We got off at 51st and the agent there re¬peatedly called the police for about 45 min¬utes to no avail. We were shaking and upsetand afraid to go out into the street even toget a cab. The police kept telling the agentthat they were reassigning someone to thecase or that there would be a delay sincethey were changing shifts. We waited aslong as we could, then Marlin hailed us acab — something a lot easier to get than acop.We went to police headquarters and fileda report at the 1st District desk. My reportnumber was E-247962, the charge, theftfrom a person. Jacques’ assailants werecharged with strong-arm robbery.Later, the following day, a black mancalled me. He had found my wallet and, Iassume, witnessed the crime. He said thesituation at the el station was terrible andhe wished me luck in getting somethingdone. He himself had to guard his motherevery day when she arrived there afterwork and said those kids had transformedthe el station into their very own reign ofterror. He said he would return my walletthrough the mails. Throughout the entireevening the only people who helped us. iron¬ically, were two blacks — Jacques' invalu¬able friend Marlin and the man who re¬turned my wallet. As far as police or C.T.A.action is concerned, we might as well havebeen in a jungle.Though I’m a North Side resident who’sbeen assaulted in Hyde Park. I’m not dumbenough to think it couldn't have happenedanywhere else. Furthermore, I don’t be¬lieve Jacques and I were naive to use the elat 10:30 on a hot Sunday night. The I.C.fares are almost prohibitively expensive,the trains, infrequent. What is criminallynaive is for the C.T.A. and police to assumethat a public place like the 55th Street el sta-e-i,,.,* Ul[Mk esfcltK Ttity& 'MC PAtiMiSgi 'J'PU ThuM “T«e iqa j u«wr4r TH|«. 7£ yciIT »»ivfe UMwnMMtTw Avt> n3sH'6nflry~TC Au. Of OS lUMifr (MgMS6 *SA StKM DMkifiW -. ("Ml 1 H AIL,'-,V Tea TwfcV* A Trtt0 l-tOC ROpH. j'- £ OttKM'■(/ AI Ml £AA 'VW**7*JTWM TH* PCADt fcAibiTs ctMHM'Act -a HR ten fQnny to*6t*SYS fi£*T** HtSUtANtHt WtuMMMitVMS /* Tctc 'THiSMur ot *«as* - itientst Y&tt U.M|££ AM. SKKii me fWfcV Ot ■016A CUIPKIT IS Utmir ttlfTHMCiaaCmTiOA/ *y t, 0*0to £*TH *. At. ett f(it it H**tlAW. Wtl*. -IT AW C£At> TO J! ’*IH0 TTJWtJSa tem s/# emett T)S'V'S Mi 6t> 'THt M/'te'Tt W.- "MINK SHAbrni » WWk J<Wt> Mi ~Th& IMt&Kt (*- >fS SMiT j- i,;. :—__i mmu. ■vsTftt. iwAc • et*- ve; *00, • wf -i.', £ ■ ~U ■I l 1/M, 61* ft*#* ■ nyset* ‘-"’iff JM Lf *aC Sc UlthMV & *T>*A7'OA j■ Mteftvt E* to’ X**k ovts Alew it At(MlOfcS Eft' mu''m atr A Outlet. ~fQ toSS IT At%W«T A i/M ot use ifmouuo MeAVt sc- ye it**e womo sn-tctm «li»ivc WAVS - f — ■yro /a .ftiiofev An Mttei,t |■ ■■■ ^A, vi 'NW I tpy tbAT c-• 6c Su»r It— _iJiOil.'Hon '■Tt*f U5«M»eTtW&iL.tdvl . f12,. "Krazy Kat" by George Herriman, 1922. Copyright International Feature Service.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, June 24, 1983 tion, where people in effect have to run agantlet through thieves and muggers,doesn’t deserve even the most minimal se¬curity precautions. That attitude betrays aninnocence that amounts to its opposite.Hyde Parkers have as much a right to theunmolested use of their rapid transit as Lin¬coln Parkers do their end of the Howard-Jackson Park line. Somehow the C.T.A. hasmanaged to protect its passengers on oneend of the route; they can do the same forHyde Park and points south. The el. yourlifeline to the Loop, is in great danger of be¬coming a hostage to people who prey on pas¬sengers. By not providing adequate securitythe C.T.A. and police create a vacuum. Jac¬ques and I got caught in it last Sunday andwe’re obviously not the first or last victimsof the vacuum. I believe if people get madenough, if they don’t write off the el as aruptured artery, if they petition the C.T.A,and police for the right to keep their walletsas they travel, something will be done about it. What’s the alternative? To let people getkilled (as we almost were Sunday night), topay the extortionate I.C. fares to preservethose wallets, to depend on buses that them¬selves are none too safe?Finally, the significance of what happened to Jacques and me has nothing to dowith the fact that we were white and our at¬tackers were black; it would have been justas bad if the opposite were true, the indis¬putable fact is that we got no more protec¬tion after the initial mugging had been re¬ported (let alone any deterrencebeforehand) from the police or C.T.A. thanif we had been in a dark alley. I don’t blamethe people who didn’t come to our aid: theyknew they could expect no protection either.Something went very wrong on Sundaynight and it’s still just as wrong right now.Lawrence BommerNewsDOONESBURY by Garry TrudeauGOOD EVENING V* ROLANDm>t£Y BURTON, Jt. TONIGHT,'30/30" EXAMINE5 ONE OF HIS NAME is ;J0MD MOORE KEN¬NEDY. HE IS THE SENIOR SENATORFROM MASSACHUSETTS BUT TO BSTHOUSANDS OF DEMOTED FOuDUERSHE IS mm SIMPLY AS "TED" mm THESE FOuOUERG*WHEREDO MY COME FROM7mU FORCEDRIVES THEM TO THRM GOODMONEY AFTER BAD7 TONIGHT. ABCme world of news urns at . TAP LIBERAL CULT:"rlREAT FROMTHE LEFT!"40. “Doonesbury” by Garry Trudeau, daily, 1979. Copyright United Press Syndicate.Art and the ComicsThe University’s David and Alfred SmartGallery will present the work of famousAmerican cartoon artists in two specialsummer exhibitions next week at the Gal¬lery, 5559 S. Greenwood Ave.The exhibits. “Saul Steinberg: Drawingsand Watercolors from the Hallmark Collec¬tion” and “The American Comic Strip,” willbe on display from July 20 through August31.Steinberg, best known for his work for TheNew Yorker magazine, will have 25 originaldrawings from the 1950’s and 1960 s on dis¬play. The Hallmark company originally purchased the drawings, which feature acombination of fine art complexity and car¬toon whimsy, for greeting card and calen¬dar design.“The American Comic Strip” will featureoriginal works by 45 American cartoonistsThe comics, dating from 1896 to the present,include selections from Alley Oop by V.T.Hamlin, Beetle Bailey by Mort Walker,Betty Boop by Max Fleischer, Popeye byE.E. Segar. Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau,and Dick Tracy by Chester Gould.The Gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.mTuesday through Saturday, and noon to 4p.m. Sunday. Admission is free.The Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago.It is published on Fridays during the summer. Editorial and business offices arelocated on the third floor of Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637 Phone962-9555.Anna FeldmanEditorCliff GrammichNews EditorKaren AxtPhotography Editor Joshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerChris ScottAdvertising ManagerBrian CloseOffice ManagerStaff; Wally Dabrowski, Bill Ejzak, Don Haslam, Nina Kavin, Sondra Krueger,Nina Lubell, Deborah Lutterbeck, Koyin Shih.I' featuresTheProgram:For the hard¬working andupwardbound By Bill EjzakWhile some of her friends are sleepinglate, watching television, and playing in theheat of a Chicago summer, Keasha is work¬ingon math problems, learning how to servea volleyball, and being cautioned about thedangers of alcohol and drug abuse.Keasha Lee, age 10, is one of about 450youngsters participating in special pro¬grams at the University of Chicago thissummer. Her daily schedule on campus is,for the most part, typical of that of youngpeople taking part in “The Program,” ayounger sibling of “The College.”Arriving at the Field House entrance at 7a.m., Keasha meets her cousin, and the twogo in to get their lunch tickets and begin theday’s activities. Almost all of the young peo¬ple are involved in the National YouthSports Program, sponsored by the NationalCollegiate Athletic Association and conduct¬ed by the University’s Office of Special Pro¬grams. The Program will is running fromJune 20 until July 31.Athletic instruction is provided in basket¬ball, volleyball, track and field, tennis,dance, and swimming. Keasha’s favoriteactivity? “Volleyball.” “Really,” she said,nodding vigorously, “I like serving.”But for keasha and the other students,sports fill only half of the day. Rigorous aca¬demic classwork and individually-paced tu¬torials fill the balance.Some of the academic programs run year-round. Nearly 100 Upward Bound studentscontinue their academic enrichmentclasses. Another 100 Pilot Enrichment Pro¬gram (PEP) students, drawn mainly fromHyde Park High School, continue their in¬tensified learning program. PEP is an un¬usual program, designed in part to improveschool academic standards “by pullingfrom the top” rather than “by pushing fromthe bottom,” according to Larry Hawkins,director of the Program. About 70 Pre-En¬richment Program students also attendclasses.Only during the sumrrier are tutorials of¬fered to strengthen students’ basic academ¬ic skills and to prepare them for SAT andACT tests.Four-year Program veteran and highschool senior Jesse Fenner attested to therigors of the academic program. “We getlots of homework,” said Fenner. “I havebeen up until 2 a.m. sometimes doing it.”But the hard work pays off. Fenner will at¬tend the U of C as a freshman this fall.Preparing young people to compete suc¬cessfully in college is the top priority of theProgram. “Our job,” Hawkins bluntly stat¬ed, “is to produce college graduates.”Even Keasha, at 10, understands that goalin her own way. “I like to learn things inclasses. I like math the best.”PHOTOS BY KAREN AXTThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 1983—5-Contacts 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 >s he an eyeglass salesman 7)2 Can I expect professional service and care7(or will I be handleo by inept non-professional salespeople7)3 Are the quality of lenses the best available7(or are they off-brands and seconds7)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 AND PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALVES!SUPER-WET BAUSCH & LOMBFLEXIBLE SOFLENSONLY $29.00 B\ B4,&F SERIESSuper-thin highly wet- only$33.75table lens specifically Basic series of lensesdesigned to correct that Bausch & Lombthose patients who built their reputationwere previous hardcontact lens failures on.• NEW SUPER SOFT HIGH OXYGEN TRANSFER ULTRATHIN - $43.75New super-soft highly oxygen transferable lenses used to correctthose parents 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) - $160.00If you have ever been told that you couldn 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)OUR PROMISE TO YOU:If you aren t pleased with your lenses after 60 days cost of the lenses will be re¬funded All contact 'ens fitting done by our Contact Lens SpecialistsDr S C Fostiak and Dr John S SchusterWe can replace your toat or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!(if lenses are in stock)IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST>CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED2566N. CI*rfcSt..Chka*o. IL 606j4880-54001724 Sherman Ave., Evantton, IL 60201(above County Seat)864-4441 Used desks,chairs, andfilesBRANDEQUIPMENT 8560 S. ChicagoRE 4-2111Open Daily 8 30-5Sat 9-2APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Large2%,4 & 6 rm.apts.S/mmer/tafeOccupancyBU8-5566 IIIill1 Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesSi nntiR COOLERSSa}e Dates: 7/15 thru 7/21LIQUOR1.75ltr .Bacardi Rum 10.79750 ml. Smirnoff Vodka (80 proof) 4.99750 ml. Jack Daniels Black Label 8.491.75ltr. Seagram’s Gim ...; 10.19750 ml Johnnie Walker Red Scotch 9.09750 ml Hennessy VS Cognac 12.991.75ltr Jim Beam Bourbon 10.29750 ml Stock Vermouth 2.99750 ml. Martell 3 Star Cognac 12.99WINES750 ml Riunite Wines 2.99750 ml. Canel Wines 3.49750 ml. Cook’s Champagne 3.594 ltr Los Hermanos (box) 6.99750 ml J. Roget Sparkling Wines 2.99BEER, SODA6-12 oz. bottles Molson (Canadian) Beer (warm) ...12-12 oz. bottles Stroh’s Beer (warm)2 ltr Canfield’s Soda (warm) 1.296-12 oz. cans Coca-Cola (warm) 1.99K IMBARK LIQUORS& WINE SHOPPE In Kimbark PlazaPhone: 493-3355 Sun.-Noon-MidnightHours: Mon.-Thurs. 8am - lamFri. & Sat. 8am - 2am6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 1983GREY CITY JOURNALMBi SOVIET MUHmmm amJuly 15, 1983 • 16th YearWelcome to the world of strategicanalysis, where we program weap¬ons that don’t work to meet threatsthat don’t exist.— Ivan Selin, Strategic ForcesDivision, Office of the theAssistant Secretary of De¬fense, 1966The Threat: Inside the Soviet Military MachineAndrew CockburnRandom House, 1983by Dave PadowitzOur government has kept us in a per¬petual state of fear — kept us in acontinuous stampede of patriotic fer¬vor — with the cry of grave nationalemergency. . . Always there hasbeen some terrible evil to gobble usup if we did not blindly rally behindit by furnishing the exorbitant sumsdemanded. Yet, in retrospect, thesedisasters never seem to have hap¬pened, seem never to have beenquite real.—General Douglas MacArthur,1957POLITICS AS VIDEO GAMEPresident Reagan has warned us againand again that we are losing the race, weare no longer number one; we are out num¬bered, out gunned and out bombed. He isfond of showing charts which look likevideo games filled with little blue and redmissiles and submarines, and reciting thefamiliar litany. The Soviet Army has tentimes as many divisions as the U.S. Armyand Marines combined; they have tentimes as many tanks, and three times asmany submarines. They are building 2,500new tanks a year while we produce only700. In the event of war in Europe, War¬saw Pact forces could move across theRhine within two days, and they are stilldeploying nuclear SS-20’s and perhapseven chemical weapons. Soviet ICBM'smay now be accurate enough to destroyour Minuteman force in a first strike.To avert our imminent defeat at thehands of the “red hordes,” it is impera¬tive, according to the President and thePentagon, that we spend 40 percent of ourfederal budget on defense. To maintainthe balance of power and prevent nuclearwar we must build the MX missile, Stealthbomber and the Cruise missile and producemore Trident subs and Nuclear aircraftcarriers. We need to deploy Pershings andneutron bombs to protect our allies inEurope, where we will also need the M-1tank. In addition to all this, there must bean effort to apply high technology in“smart” weapons, such as anti-tank rock¬ets and sophisticated electronic counter¬measures for aircraft, such as AWACS. Weeven need a new jeep.In The Threat, Cockburn gets to the heartof the matter; what do we really knowabout the Soviet military? Drawing from awide range of sources — experts withinthe defense establishment, Sovietemigres, even Congressional testimony —he presents a rather different picture thanthe one usually painted by Pentagon bu¬reaucrats. This book is likely to be unwel¬come to both the Kremlin and the Penta¬gon, and should be required reading forwar gamers and peace activists alike. TheSoviet military has been portrayed by thegovernment and the media as an awe¬some, invincible war machine, under thecomplete control of its masters. In reality,according to Cockburn’s evidence, it is anawkward, inefficient apparatus, equippedwith badly designed, obsolete weapons,manned by poorly trained, insubordinaterecruits, and run by officers more con- HOLLYWOODcerned with bureaucratic survival thanwith military effectiveness.The Warsaw Pact is widely considered tohave superiority in conventional forces inEurope, primarily based on Soviet armor— tanks and armored personnel carriers.According to the civilian myth, theseweapons are “rugged, well constructed,and capable of doing the task assigned.”However, the American troops responsiblefor maintaining Soviet T-62 tanks cap¬tured by the Israeli Army regard the T-62as “crude and very unreliable.” They usea manual transmission that is so bad that“drivers are issued with sledgehammersto get the gears in gear.” The interior is socramped that there are reports that Egyp¬tian and Syrian tank crews in the 1973desert war were asphyxiated or went intoshock. There is an automatic loader for thegun which is notorious for loading armsand legs. The diesel engine is based on a1928 French engine designed for dirigi¬bles. The newer version, the T-64, uses anengine copied from the British Chieftantank, which itself has a very poor reputa¬tion. A Soviet veteran says of the T-64“the engine itself was not only bad, it wasdisgusting.” The gun used on the T-64 andthe T-72 is 125-mm, larger than the stan¬dard 105-mm rifled gun on other tanks,but less accurate. “In fact, it was an allpowerful gun,” says Cockburn, “ whichalways missed its target.” The BTR-60personnel carrier is called a “coffin onwheels” by Soviet soldiers.Because the U.S. and the Soviet Unionare both happy to supply arms to virtuallyany nation able to pay, there have beenseveral opportunities to study the perfor¬mance of these weapons, aircraft in partic¬ular. In the 1971 Indo-Pakistani war, Pa¬kistani pilots flying Korean-war vintageF-86s destroyed six MiG-21 s for each oftheir planes shot down. The Israelis haveaveraged 20, using somewhat newerfighters. A former Air Force fighter pilotdescribed the MiG-23 as “meat on thetable.”There is little room for complacency,however; our passion for technological so¬phistication may lead to complex, expen¬sive weapons that are vulnerable and asunreliable on the battlefield as those ofthe Soviets. Both the Israelis and the Brit¬ ish have learned that large warships canbe destroyed by rockets which costhundreds of times less. During the VietnamWar U.S. aircraft with elaborate electroniccountermeasures and antiradar capabili¬ties were shot down by small arms fire andmissiles aimed by sight. In the end it ishuman soldiers, not machines, that fightwars.Perhaps the most revealing evidence inThe Threat is Cockburn's interviews withSoviet emigres who served in the armedforces. At the age of 18 all male citizensare drafted for two or three years, duringwhich time they learn a lot about survivingthe system, if not about warfare. Nobodylikes army food, but a soldier must behealthy to fight, and vitamin deficienciesseem to be common. Between thd ages of18 and 20 Soviet recruits gain only half asmuch weight as their NATO counterparts.Alcohol is forbidden to enlisted men, but itis their only pastime and an estimated onethird of Soviet troops are alcohol depen¬dent. They commonly drink anything fromcologne to brake fluid, and aircraft anti¬freeze is especially popular.Racism and corruption are basic to theSoviet system. There is an unofficial butrigid caste system based on race and se¬niority. Only Slavs are given positions ofauthority, while Central Asians and otherminorities are often not even given mili¬tary training; instead they are used as la¬borers. Every six months there is a call up,which creates four age cohorts. The"bosses” or “old men” about to finishtheir two year term command obediencefrom the newer recruits, enforced by phys¬ical force — ruthless beatings in the oar-racks after lights out. Length of service ismore important than rank; an “old man”given an order by a first year sergeantgave the expected response — “I told himto fuck off or I would break his teeth.”Another fundamental problem is the"vertical stroke” — misconduct or in¬fringement of regulations leads to increas¬ingly severe penalties as one moves up thechain of command. A trivial violation by anenlisted man, if reported, might causeserious punishment for his superiors. As aresult, “You can get away with a lot of badstuff in the army.” This can lead to any¬thing from falsified reports on defective equipment to unreported murders. It alsoleads to one patent absurdity; Soviet wargames are carefully choreographed andrehearsed, as any slip up could cost a gen¬eral his job. This is in marked contrast tothe idea that war games simulate the per¬formance of men and machines under actu¬al battle conditions. Films of “OperationDnieper” have been used by NATO com¬manders and even shown on American TVto demonstrate the ability of Soviet am¬phibious tanks in crossing a river. In factthat operation was practiced for months,and to ensure success the river bed waspaved — hardly a realistic combat simula¬tion.What of nuclear war capability? It isclaimed by our military leaders that theSoviets have plans to fight under nuclearbattlefield conditions, and that the SovietCivil Defense program shows that they be¬lieve they could survive a nuclear war. No¬body has any idea of what a “limited” nu¬clear war would be like, although wecertainly know the effects of a comparati¬vely small atomic bomb on an unpreparedcivilian population. The Soviet Union is alargely underdeveloped country with fewroads, most without hard surfaces, andless than 5 million motor vehicles. Most ofthe urban population is expected to walkto safety and build temporary shelters onthe spot. The irony of this does not escapethe public. There is a joke in Moscow;“What do you do in the case of nu¬clear attack?”“Wrap yourself in a sheet and crawlslowly to the cemetery”“Why slowly?”“So as to avoid causing a panic.”There remains a real threat of militaryconflict between the superpowers. It is thetask of the military to prepare for thatpossibility, and it is their job to be “worst-case thinkers.” But it is strange that weshould be so willing to believe the claimsof the defense bureaucrats, who wouldfrighten us into paying tremendousamounts of money for complex, untestedand potentially useless weapons. Cock-burn's book puts some reality back intothe numbers and graphs, and it is worthreading, because this isn’t a video game.<<<C<C<<<<<CCCCC<THREE MEALS 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 753-2282 RockefellerChapelSunday9 a.m.Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 a.m.University Religious ServiceBERNARD O. BROWNDean of Rockefeller Memorial Chapel12:15 and 4 p.m.Carillon Recital \DR. M. R, MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100PRESSES up to 25x38...Fast print to 22x28The Southside's largest andmost complete print shopOffset & LetterpressLAYOUT & ARTPHOTO COMPOSITIONOver 100 typestyles forbrochures, books, ad books- all your printing needsComplete Bindery includesgang stitching, perfectbinding, plastic binding, diecutting, embossing, hotstamping, eyeletting, tinningBANKERSPRINTHU 7-3142 UNIONLABELy5832 So. GreenOutdoors under the stars in Hutchinson Court...LIGHT OPERA WORKSChicago’s only professional light operacompany performs “THE WORLD OF GILBERT& SULLIVAN” featuring selections fromH.M.S. Pinafore, The Mikado, The Gondoliers,and Pirates of Penzance.Friday & SaturdayJuly 15 & 168pmTickets: $3 & $5Visa/MastercardBox Suppers Available: Call 493-2808Coming Next Weekend:Chicago Brass Ensembleperforming selections fromBach, Debussy, Joplin & Maurer, Indoors in the new Court Theatre building...The Mercury Directions Production ofv *Talley’sFollyLanford Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize¬winning play about the tender, funnycourtship of two very special people.Deanna Dunagan and David Regal star inthis romantic comedy which has receivedrave reviews from coast to coast.Now - August 21Wed - Sat at 8:00pmSunday at 2:30 & 7:30pmTickets: $10 - $12Visa/MC/AmexFree Parking Directly Adjacentto the theatre.5706 S. University • 962-7300 5535 S. Ellis • 753-44722—FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL15 16 17 18 19 20 21lover (Marius Goring) and career.The theme, even in 1948, provedmoth-eaten, but audiences forgaveit as a showcase for some of Bri¬tain's finest dancers. The climax — alavish, technicolor adaptation ofHans Christian Andersen’s fairy taleabout a pair of enchanted slippersthat doom their owner to a deathdance — was the first full-lengthballet written and choreographed(Robert Helpmann) exclusively forthe screen, and remains, eventoday, a surrealistic favorite amongballetomanes. Thur July 21 at 8:30LSF. $2 —PFL’Espoir (Andre Malraux, 1945) Basedon a novel of the same name byAndre Malraux. Tonight — Thur July20, at Facets, 1517 W Fullerton Ave,281-4114.The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (SergioLeone, 1966) Thur July 21. at 6 Thetheater of the School of the Art Insti¬tute, Columbus Dr and Jackson Blvd,443-3733. $3.Pub Movies shows at 7 and 10: MonJuly 18. Taxi Driver; Tue July 19.Casablanca, Wed July 20, Cabaret;Thur July 21, Star Trek II.MUSICPub Concert An evening of jazz featur¬ing the Pete Baron Jazztet. Tonight,10-12. $1 suggested donation.Jazz Concert Two of the most impres¬sive musicians on the Chicago Jazzscene performing together: Kahil El-Zabar, of the Ethnic Heritage Ensem¬ble, and Douglas Ewart. Tonight at8. Chicago Filmmakers, 6 W Hub¬bard. 329-0854.Grant Park Concerts Fri, July 15 at 8:Ives, Schumann and Berlioz. PaulStrauss, conductor; Robert Levin,piano. Sat July 16 at 8 and Sun July17 at 7: Mendelssohn and Rachman¬inoff. Paul Strauss, conductor; GlennDicterow, violin. Free.Light Opera Works in Hutchinson Court.Sat and Sun at 8. 753-4472. $5. $3students and seniors.Jazz and Blues at the South Shore Com¬munity Club musical festival. Blueson Saturday and jazz on Sundayfrom about 1. SSCC, 71st and SouthShore. $1 donation requested.Asian Cultural Arts Flower arranging,tea ceremony, Koto music, anddances. Sun July 17 at 3. In the Japa¬nese Gardens on Wooded Island inJackson Park, 924-2550. Free.Kapture An ‘’aural arts performanceensemble” that employs vocals, in¬struments, and electronic music. Partof the New Music Series at the MoM-Drawing by Saul Steinberg at Smart Gallery, beginning Wednesday.MISCNeighborhood Festival in ColumbusPark; Grand Slam at 1; N.T.B. at 2;Coffee at 3; D Train at 4:15; TheSpinners at 5:45. Sun July 17, 1-7.Columbus Park, Harrison St and Cen¬tral Ave, 744-3370. Free.Science Jubilee Fri-Sun July 15-17,11-7. At the Museum of Science andIndustry, 836-7000.Lorado Taft, His Life, His Work, His In¬fluence. Opens Sat and Sun July 16and 17, 10-4, regular hours, Sat,10-12 and Sun, 2-4. At the HydePark Historical Society, 5529 S LakePark Ave, 285-2873. Free.DuSable Museum 9th Annual Arts andCrafts Festival Sat and Sun, July 16and 17, 10-8, 740 E 56th PI,947-0600. Free.ODomankoma Kyerema CulturalTroupe. 26 young dancers and musi¬cians, 10-19 years old, from WestAfrica. Sun July 17, at 4 and Fri July22 at 7. At International House,1414 E 59th, 753-2270. $5. $2.50children.ARTSaul Steinberg: Drawing and watercol-ors; and The American Comic Strip,Wed July 20 thru Aug 31 at theSmart Gallery, 5550 Greenwood.Tue-Sat, 10-4; Sun, 12-4. 753-2121.Free.Bruce Davidson: The Subway Series.Color pix from NYC; super. Thru July30 at Columbia College, 600 S Michi¬gan. Mon-Fri, 10-4; Sat, 12-4.663-1600 ext 104. Free.Michael Rubin B&W photos of Midwestlandscapes. Thru Aug 20 at the Cul¬tural Center, 78 E Washington. Mon-Thur, 9-7; Fri, 9-6; Sat, 9-5.346-3278. Free.An Open Land: Photos of the Midwest,1852-1982. Thru Aug 14 at the ArtInstitute, Michigan at Adams. Mon-Wed, Fri, 10:30-4:30; Thur, 10:30-8;Sat, 10-5; Sun, 12-5. 443-3500. Ad¬mission discretionary except Thur,free.John Heartfield: Photomontages of theNazi Period. “Photocollages. .would fit better: the materials com¬bined are photos but the manner oftheir combination is not photogra¬phic. Still: Can’t argue with the ef¬fect. Thur Aug 21 at the Peace Muse¬um, 364 W Erie. Tue-Sun, 12-5except Thur, -8. 440-1860. $1.-DMOutdoor Installations by (originally) 60artists in the area surrounding Chi¬cago and Milwaukee Avenues; someno longer remain. Thru July 30 atRandolph Street Gallery, 756 N Mil¬waukee. Get a map: Tue-Sat 11-5.666-7737. Free. Tonight at 8, poetry readings by several; music at 10. $3,$2 students.Grounded/West Hubbard Drawings,paintings, and small sculpture bymembers of the spaceless W Hub¬bard collective. Thru July 26 at theContemporary Art Workshop, 542 WGrant Place. Tue-Sat, 11-5.525-9624. Free.Psychic Territoriality in the Post-Mod¬ern Era. Diverse showing of works invarious media. Thru July 30 at NABGallery, 331 S Peoria. Tue, Sat,11:30-4:30. 733-0886. Free.The Box Show Thru July 23 at W.P A.Gallery, 1539 N Damen. Thur, 12-8:Fri, Sat, 12-5. 278-9724. Free.Gary Justis, kinetic sculpture; Bill Cass,figurative painting and drawing.Thru July 30 at Marianne Deson Gal¬lery, 340 W Huron. Tue-Fri, 10-5:30;Sat, 11-5. 787-0005. Free.Sylvia Plimack Mangold Paintings,1965-83. Thru July 30 at YoungHoffman Gallery, 215 W Superior.Tue-Sat, 10-5:30. 951-8828. Free.FILMThe Howling (Joe Dante, 1981) Joe Twi¬light Zone Dante's updating of theWolfman legend is a wild, woolly,and witty horror film. Dee Wallace(the mother in E.T.) plays a reporterwho takes a vacation after search¬ing for a criminal, only to uncover arural family of werewolves in theserene countryside setting of an Esa-len-style commune. The script is byJohn Sayles (Secaucus Seven, Lian¬na), who has written a suspensefulhorror film and a loving tribute toall the Wolfman films of the past.One of the best recent horror films,and good summer fun. Tonight at7:15 & 9:00. SAO/SOQ, Cobb, $2.—JMCutter’s Way (Ivan Passer, 1981) Cut¬ter's Way is the best and most intel¬ligent movie yet to be made aboutthe plight of the Vietnam veteran.The film is an engrossing psychologi¬cal drama about veteran Alex Cut¬ter's bizarre scheme to expose apowerful oil company executive heis convinced is a murderer. John Heard (Cat People) is magnificent asCutter, the physically scared andembittered war veteran who mas¬terminds the plan that slowly over-whelmes his carefree but loyal com¬panion, Jeff Bridges (star of WinterKills). Cutter’s Way is a rarely seenfilm, and a must-see. Sat July 16, at7:15 & 9:30. SAO/SOQ, Cobb $2.—JMThe Grand Illusion (Jean Renoir, 1937)Perhaps the greatest movie evermade, and certainly the greatestanti-war film, Renoir’s classic fo¬cuses on French prisoners duringWWI and their cultured GermanCommandant (Erich von Stroheim).The Grand Illusion is about life, war,friendship, death, and why The Iliadis the greatest book ever written.With Jean Gabin, the French JohnWayne. Sun July 17, at 8. Interna¬tional House films, l-House. $2.—JMCharlotte (Frans Weisz) A portrait ofthe artist Charlotte Salomon. SunJuly 17, at 2, 4 and 6 at the School ofthe Art Institute, Columbus Dr andJackson Blvd, 443-3733. $3.Meet John Doe (1941) Frank Capra’smost widely acclaimed vision ofAmerica was also his darkest. Ittook 5 different endings, 7 months,and all of Riskin and Capra's re¬sources (their only independentproduction together) to convince au¬diences that Capra’s populism wasnot to be confused with optimism,and that miracles — even by thepocketful — were few and far be¬tween. With Gary Cooper, BarbaraStanwyck, Edward Arnold andJimmy Stewart. Tue July 19 at 8.Doc. $2 -PFLaura (Otto Preminger, 1944) RoubenMamoulian left Twentieth-CenturyFox during the middle of shootingfor Laura, and it is evident in thestartlingly effective juxtapositionof his trademark high-gloss sets,and Otto Preminger’s calm, de¬tached, but thoroughly corrosivetreatment of greed and cruelty inposh society. What begins as a rou¬tine investigation of a not-so-rou-tine shotgun murder turns into aweb of jealousy and confused identi¬ties. With Clifton Webb, Gene Tier¬ney, Vincent Price, Judith Andersonand Dorothy Adams. Dratler & Hof-fenstein’s dialogue is superb. WedJuly 20 at 8 SOQ (Cobb) $2 -PFThe Red Shoes (1948) Powell & Press-burger's last film for Rank Interna¬tional is a lingering, often ponder¬ous glimpse of the histrionics thatbeset a ballerina (Moira Shearer)backstage when caught betweenGrey City Journal 7/15/83Staff: Steven Diamond, Pat Finnegan, Russel Forster, Kathy Kelly, Jef¬frey Makos, Leah Mayes, Nadine McGann, Vince Michael, David Miller,Maddy Paxman, John Probes, Judith Silverstein, Beth Sutter, Ken Wis-sokerProduction: Lorraine Kenny, David MillerEditors: Lorraine Kenny and Sharon Peshkin ing Gallery, 1034 W Barry. Sun July17 at 2. 472-9894. $5.THEATERSea Marks Written by Gardner McKay,directed by Jeffrey Segal. The playis described as a timeless love storyof a fisherman and a publishing as¬sistant and the difficulties that arisefrom the fisherman’s attempt to fitinto society. Pagasus ends its pressrelease by saying, “Sea Marks isthe best in summertime romance.Plan to see this play with someoneyou love or with someone you wantto love.’’ I won’t go, but that doesn’thave to stop you. Thur thru Sat at 8,Sun at 2 and 7, thru Aug 21. PegasusPlayer's Theater, 1020 W BrynMawr, 271-2638. S4.50-S7 —SDMarch of the Falsettos by William Finn,directed by Dan Yurgaitis. This light¬hearted musical had a very suc¬cessful run in New York and if prop¬erly done could be a very enjoyablesummer show. Wed thru Sat at 7:30.Fn and Sat at 9:30 and Sun at 3. thruAug 28. The Theater Building, 1225V. Belmont, 327-5252. $12.50,$14.50. -SDDiaries of a Madman Written and direct¬ed by Steven Rambelow. This play isadapted from the short story writ¬ten by Nickolai Gogol. Thur thru Sunat 8, thru Aug 21. John Lennon Audi¬torium, 703 Howard St. Evanston,328-4 1 51 $6-$7Talley’s Folly Written by Landford Wil¬son, directed by Charles Nolle Wedthru Sat at 8, Sun at 2:30 and 7:30.Court Theater. 5535 S Ellis Ave.753-4472. $10-$12, $2 student dis¬count.Round and Round the Garden Writtenby Alan Ayckbourn, directed byJohn Ostrander. Thur thru Sat at 8and Sun at 3 and 7. Court Studio,57th and University, 962-7300. $7and $9. $4 student rush on Thurs andSun.Bridal Polanaise Written and directedby Steven Rambelow. See reviewthis week's gcj. Wed thru Sun at 8thru July 29. Black Bird Theater.5845 N Broadway, 334-8212 $10.Flash in the Pan Written by Denise De-Clue, Jeff Berkson and John Ker-raker, directed by Dennis Zacek.Wed thru Fri and Sun at 8. Sat at6:30 and 10, thru July 17. The The¬ater Building. 1225 W Belmont,327-5252. $5. $6 50. $7.50.The Miss Firecracker Contest Writtenby Beth Henley, directed by GarySinise. Tue thru Fri at 8, Sat at 6 and9:30 and Sun at 7. Thru July 24Steppenwolf Theater, 2851 N Halst-ed 472-4141 $10.50-$14.A Soldier's Play Written by CharlesFuller, directed by Douglas TurnerWard. Wed and Thur at 7:30. Fri andSat at 8. Sun at 2:30. Thru July 24.Goodman Theater, 200 S ColumbusDr, 443-4940. S13-S19Romeo and Juliet Yet another producti¬on by the Free Shakespeare Com¬pany. Their name refers to the no¬tion that one can alter the script, andplacement to achieve a better under¬standing for today's audience,rather than the price of admission.Personally, I wish it referred to theadmission price, instead. It willprobably be light and enjoyablesummer entertainment, but 1 don’tbelieve in enjoying myself when tsee a play; rather it should be athought-provoking experience. Thurthru Sat at 8, Sun at 2 and 7. ThruAug 21 The Free Shakespeare Co,1608 N Wells 337-1025. $3-$8.-SDThe Woman Here are No Different Writ¬ten by Nancy Beckett, directed byDan LaMorte. See review in thisweek's gcj. Thru July 24 WisdomBridge Theatre, 1559 W Howard,743-0486 (|J(l\I!IIII/iTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1983—3RUMBELOWSIMAGESby Stephen DiamondPlays differ from other arts in that theytry to tell a story through live images andwords. Many plays decide to pick eitherthe words or the images as the main devicethrough which to tell the plot. In Bridal Po¬lonaise, Steven Rumbelow choosesimages. These images form a very simplis¬tic plot which can be divided into threeparts. First the audience is invited to awedding which ends in a fight between thefather and his son-in-law. Polish history,the narrator tells us, can be told throughits conflicts. The audience is then escortedinto another room where we are told thehistory of Poland until it became part ofthe Soviet bloc. In the final part, the audi¬ence is asked to move once again and isshown the Poland of today. This subjectmatter is very broad, and as a result,Rumbelow has chosen to tell the audienceof Poland’s struggle with the church butnot to give us any details of the conflicts.Rumbelow wants us to comprehend the en¬ergy and excitement of Polish historythrough the images of the people who areon both sides of the conflicts.The narrators are the only characters inBridal Polonaise who speak English. Inparts two and three, the audience is takenon a trip through history by a tour guidewho explains only the fundamentals of theplot and then disappears, leaving the au¬dience to watch the images evolve. Thisdevice of a tour guide works well, provid¬ing the play with a thread that unitesimages and gives the audience some dis¬tance from the conflicts which Rumbelowdescribes. I wonder if the play would havebeen as successful if I knew Polish. Abouthalf of the people in the audience were artsy types from the North Side and theother half were Polish. Some of the latterunderstood the words and became in¬volved in the story, rather than analyzingthe images as Rumbelow had intended. Inorder for the play to work, the audiencemust become distanced through the loss ofcommunication, and realize that theimages are distorted because the actorsare too involved with the events to have acomplete understanding.Bridal Polonaise is a play of images,some of which work better than others.Rumbelow’s images run the gambit frombeautiful and ingenious to redundant andtrite. The best image was the first, depict¬ing the wedding ceremony. The audience istreated to traditional Polish food andvodka and asked to dance. Slowly our in¬hibitions disappear and we become part ofthe ceremony, laughing along with theactors at the bad Polish jokes told by thenarrator/band leader. (“How does a Polemake a ham sandwich?" ‘‘By taking theirham ration stamp and putting it betweentwo bread ration stamps.”) The worst image is at the beginning of the secondpart when Rumbelow depicts the birth andrise of Poland by using a white dove. Thissymbol has become worn and boring. Onthe whole, however, the images have morein common with the glory of the weddingscene than the triteness of the dove scene.However, even when an image is trite, it isunderstandable.My main problem with the play was thatsome of the images were overly sympa¬thetic to Poland. In one, the audience istaken to the underground life of Poland,begged for cigarettes and money, andforced to watch a cheap "fuck." The audi¬ence cannot help but feel sorry, no matterhow bad the imagery is. This is a subjec¬tive view of history and all of Poland is notnot as bad as this scene, just as all the U.S.is not as bad as 55th St. where I have wit¬nessed a robbery and people continuallybegging for cigarettes.The acting in Bridal Polonaise is superb.Many of the actors have to keep changingtheir roles depending on the image, andthey glided smoothly through these changes. Rumbelow gives each actor atype of person to play (the aristocrat, thepeasant), which makes these changes easi¬er. Nevertheless, the actors still convinc¬ingly convey the essence and the energyunderlying each image.The most imaginative part of the wholeproduction is the staging. The theater ishoused in an old trolly warehouse whichgives the actors many areas in which toconceive their images. The changes in loca¬tion for the three parts of the play wouldhave been unsuccessful if they were donewithin the confines of a normal theater.In short, I recommend seeing Bridal Po¬lonaise because Rumbelow and the actorscreate some beautiful images. The audi¬ence must realize that some of the imageswill be trite or play too heavily on theirfeelings even though Rumbelow tries toavoid this through distancing us by usingmainly Polish, with only the tour guidespeaking English. Through the tour guidehe achieves the necessary continuity andthe audience is able to comprehend andenjoy the events of the play.AND NEITHERARE THE MENby Carol HutchisonNancy Beckett’s The Women Here Are NoDifferent, directed by Dan LaMorte, takesplace in a shelter for battered women, andfocuses on six victims who share many ofthe same feelings about their lives. This isa serious and prevalent problem — one outof every five women is beaten by her cho¬sen mate. This is the kind of play, howev¬er, which is destined for obscurity. Thesubject matter and Beckett’s handling of italienate a large part of her audience —especially men.Beckett’s six main characters are very -odifferent from each other. The first charac- Ster we are introduced to is Ruth (Susan oMullen). She is the play’s stereotypical £farm woman, the type who washes six cloads of clothes by hand and then scrubs ®the floor for fun. She is strong-willed, anddoesn’t say anything unless she has some¬thing to say. Her midwestern brown hair istied back in a matronly ponytail, and formost of the play she is clothed in a dowdybrown dress. If I had been sitting closer tothe stage, I would have detected freckles,no doubt. The idea of a woman born with apail in her hand for slopping the hogs isprobably a standard with many people.The depiction is tolerable as an introduc¬tion to the character. Such a prefabrica¬ tion relieves the playwright of the task ofdeveloping a character. In a dramaticmonologue Ruth informs us of her back¬ground. We learn that after being beatenperiodically by her husband, she jumpedon a bus to the big city leaving her childrenbehind. This is the point at which Beckettshould downplay the stereotype and de¬velop Ruth’s real character. We do seesome of the real Ruth. She evokes sympa¬thy from the audience because we are the only ones aware of her problems — shedoesn’t want to burden the others in thehouse. Trying to solve her own problems,Ruth asks herself the question: “Who iswrong, me or him?” The tragedy of Ruth’scharacter is that it must be one or theother. But even as we begin to realize thisabout Ruth’s character, Beckett’s depen¬dence on the stereotype becomes a nui¬sance. At one point in the play Ruth isasked why she has stopped writing to her children. She replies that sometimes it’sbetter not to write anything at all. Unfor¬tunately, Beckett has Ruth add. “Besides,I don’t write so good,” as she looks down,embarrassed by her lack of education. Thisruins the effect.Beckett is more successful in her devel¬opment of Theresa (Carole Gutierrez).Theresa is a middle class, suburban house¬wife who has made homemaking her life’swork. After years of waxing the diningroom table and carting the kids to base¬ball practice, she has realized it doesn’thave to be this way. She starts as a timid,non-assertive type of woman, but she isable to communicate with the other womenin the shelter. That interaction is impor¬tant to her. By the end of the play, she stillloves her kids and takes them to baseballpractice, she still wears polyester pant¬suits, she is still timid, but she lives for her¬self, too. In contrast to Ruth, Theresatakes upon herself part of the responsibili¬ty for her relationship with her husband.The majority of the audience waswomen, which is a pity. Beckett says “Thetruth is, we are all responsible for the re¬lationships we create.” But the setting andsubject matter point an accusing finger atmen, who could learn just as much from theplay as women. The man sitting next to meleft at intermission and didn’t come back.Carole Gutierrez is outstanding asTheresa. The set is simple and appropriateand the lighting particularly varied andskillful. Musical selections between or dur¬ing scenes aptly set the mood. This play isa first for Wisdom Bridge in two ways: it isNancy Beckett’s first full-length play, andit is the Wisdom Bridge Training Center’sfirst fully staged production.4—FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL— >... tI enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372 COME SKATE WITHThe High Rollers Skate Club1st & 3rd Wednesday Evenings8-11 p.m.EASTSIDE WHEELSROLLER RINK2101 East 95th Street731-3636ADULTS ONLYStudios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9.00 A.M.4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridaySat. 104 Donate BloodCall the University ofChicago Blood Bank962*6247for an appointment The Closer You Get The Better We Look!Hyde Park’s Completely NewApartment ResidenceA Short Walk From The Lake And:Harper Ct. • University of ChicagoThe /. C. • RestaurantsIncludes• Master T. V. Antenna • New Ceramic Tile• Ind. 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Individual ther¬mostats. electricity and heat in lowassessments and priced to sellquickly at $45.(XX).MILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.S55-1SOOThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15. 1983—7-NewsMuseum celebrates jubileeBy Nina KavinThe Museum of Science and Industry, oneof Chicago’s major tourist attractions, willcelebrate its 50th birthday this weekendwith a science jubilee that will take place at57th St. and Lake Shore Drive, and will coin¬cide with Chicago’s annual Air and WaterShow.The live entertainment, exhibits, and dis¬plays commemorating the 50-year existenceof the museum will span 30 acres of JacksonPark and will include special indoor exhibitssuch as a 10-foot birthday cake baked for theoccasion.The celebration will take place from July15 to July 17, beginning at 11 a.m. and end¬ing at 7 p.m. each day, and will be free ofcharge. Live entertainment will include ajazz concert from 3 to 6 p.m. Friday, the Chi¬cago Children’s Choir, folk music, ’50s-stylegrouops, and ethnic performances. Therewill be a puppet stage, a science circus anda science midway with games costing 25cents for two. Individual craftsmen willdemonstrate crafts such as glass-blowing,paper-making, and bookbinding. There willalso be 30 carnival-style games, each de¬monstrating a scientific principle.Hot-air balloons and antique cars and air¬craft will be among the museum’s outdoorexhibits, and visitors will also be able to seea 1950s CTA bus and Aero 2002-Car of the Fu¬ture. Space food, a space-suit and a trainingPolscontinued from page oneBullock denied receiving support fromVrdolyak, although he said that a candidatereceiving Vrdolyak’s help would not neces¬sarily be politically “contaminated.” Bul¬lock stated, “Prior to the Mayor’s remarks,the campaign had been conducted on a highplain. Unfortunately, the remarks have di¬minished” the campaign’s stature.Bullock charged that Washington’s state¬ments have averted discussion of the cam¬paign’s “real issues” concerning domesticand foreign policy. Bullock believes Wash¬ington “should have stayed neutral, but ifhe wants to take a leave of absence from theMayor’s office, I’ll debate either him or Mr.Hayes on the issues of the campaign.”Bullock attacked Hayes as Washington’s“puppet” who “can’t address the issues,and, by his own admission, has no experi¬ence.” Bullock believes that Washington’sendorsement is “irrelevant,” as the mainissue of the campaign is who can best repre¬sent “not just the district’s black majority,but the progressive white element as8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 11 model of a space shuttle cockpit will be ondisplay, and lessons on how to manipulatethe controls of the space shuttle will begiven. Another exhibit to be featured is thecommunication device used by E.T. to“phone home.” Inside, the museum’s regu¬lar exhibits will be supplemented by the con¬tinuous screening of films from NASA, anddisplays will include a robot exhibit, and aspecial exhibition called “China: 7000 yearsof Discovery,” for which there is a cost of $3and $1.50 for children.Strolling entertainers, jugglers andmimes will enhance the festive atmosphere,and visitors will have the opportunity topose for photographs which will be takenfree by the Kodak Bear. Science Jubilee sou¬venirs will also be available.Thirty Chicago-area restaurants will runfood booths at the fair. Among the restau¬rants to be represented will be Edwardo’sPizza, Orly’s, the Medici, and Leon’s B-B-Q,and food specialties will include ham¬burgers, falafel, ribs, Italian ices and cap-pucino-chip cheesecake. To ensure organi¬zation, two information booths will be setup, and there will be a lost children/lost andfound booth and a first-aid station.Because approximately 100,000 people areexpected to attend each day of the sciencejubilee, and because exhibits will coverparking spaces, it is advisable to walk, bikeor catch a bus or train to the museum,rather than to walk.well.”Bullock has differed sharply with Wash¬ington in past campaigns. In 1980, Bullocksupported Richard M. Daley’s campaign forCook County State's Attorney, while Wash¬ington backed Republican Bernard Carey.Last spring, Bullock supported formerMayor Jane Byrne’s re-election campaignover Washington’s mayoral bid, althoughBullock supported Washington as the Demo¬cratic Party’s nominee in the April generalelection.According to campaign disclosure state- .ments for the municipal primary campaign,Citizens for Larry S. Bullock received$70,000 from the Democratic Party of Chi¬cago and Cook County and Citizens forVrdolyak. Bullock said that the money wasused for the 2nd Ward campaign for theRegular Democratic Organization’s slatedcandidates in the February primary, in¬cluding Byrne, City Clerk Walter Kozu-bowski, and City Treasurer Cecil Partee.Although his Congressional campaign hasyet to file a campaign disclosure statement,Bullock stated that his campaign is current¬ly running a deficit, as his February effortsfor the slated Democratic ticket did.Chew filed a disclosure statement on July6, in which he noted he had received $10,849 Plans for CCE underwayBy Nina LubellThe Center for Continuing Education, tobe renovated by the construction firm ofCoath and Gross, will open this fall as a resi¬dence hall for graduate and professionalschool students. CCE was formerly a resi¬dential conference center and housed the of¬fices of Continuing Education and Universi¬ty Extension.Calvert Audrain, the Director of PhysicalPlanning and Construction, selected Coathand Goss, the lowest bidders of seven con¬tractors submitting bids. Cone and Kalb As¬sociated designed the project based on sug¬gestions by a faculty-student committeethat met with Audrain’s staff and withCharles D. O’Connell, vice president anddean of students in the University.The Graduate Residence Hall will room138 students. Joseph Isenbergh, assistantprofessor in the Law School, will be the resi¬dent head. Audrain said that most roomsArea violentcrime downBy Koyin ShihWhile police crime statistics report a 39percent decrease in Hyde Park’s violentcrime, violent crime throughout the cityrose by 39 percent. In the 21st District,which includes Hyde Park, violent crimefigures decreased by 8 percent. Incidentsclassified as violent crimes include rape,robbery, and homicide. Assault is not in¬cluded.The Hyde Park-Kenwood crime statisticscompiled by police beat cover the area from47th St. to 60th St. and from Cottage GroveAvenue to the lake, not including a 12-square-block area of northwest Hyde Park-Kenwood.The rape percentage so far this year is up71 percent citywide and 45 percent in the21st District. Last year at this time, sevenrape cases were filed. This year, there havebeen eight rape incidents.Robbery citywide is up by 39 percent thisyear, while robbery in Hyde Park alone isdown 42.5 percent. Homicide is down in the21st District as well as in Hyde Park and inthe city.One explanation for the rising citywidecrime figures is the recent enforcement ofstatistical reporting within the police de¬partment. Last December, an internal de¬partment audit showed that many crime re¬ports were being incorrectly dismissed bythe police for the purpose of keeping crimetotals lower. As a result of the audit whichwas released in May, more accurate crimereporting has been pledged by Acting PoliceSupt. James O’Grady.However, Robert Mason of the South EastChicago Commission said that reporting ofHyde Park-Kenwood crime incidents “hasalways been accurate because of communi¬ty vigilance.”in donations and loans for his campaign.The two biggest contributors were SouthCentral Music, Co., which donated $400, andan Aamco Transmissions franchise in thedistrict, which gave $300.Chew was “furious” over Washington’scharges. In a sharp attack on Washington,Chew said that he has not received backingfrom Vrdolyak allies, but would not turn itdown if it were offered.Humes also denied receiving bankingfrom Vrdolyak allies. She said, “I have nottaken any money from the ‘Vrdolyak 29’ orany other group resisting progressive politi¬cal change. I have my issues, and I willstick with them.” She said the “accusationswere as unscrupulous as those aimed atMayorWashington during the mayoral cam¬paign.” Humes supported Washington’smayoral bid in the primary and generalelection campaigns.The candidates will meet again next Mon¬day in a debate at the Craske Auditorium ofthe Chicago Osteopathic School of Medicine,5200 S. Ellis Ave., at 7 p.m. All of the can¬didates have been invited. The debate, spon¬sored by the League of Women Voters, willfeature questions from members of the au¬dience. David Axelrod of the Chicago Tri¬bune will serve as moderator. will be singles with baths. Several roomswill be equipped for handicapped students.A kitchen and dining room will be on thesecond floor. There will be a number ofcommon rooms for television, exercise,small conferences, music practice andstorage. The central hall and its secondfloor balcony, with the exception of somenew furnishings, will be unchanged.The need for the new residence arosewhen Laughlin and Harper Halls, two grad¬uate student residences, closed in 1982.The CCE was built in 1962 with a grantfrom the W.W. Kellogg Foundation. Theoriginal architect was Edward DurellStone. Audrain explained that while at¬tempting to keep the aesthetic harmony ofthe original architecture, “the functionalaim is to make the space attractive to stu¬dents.”PHOTO BY KAREN AXTThe Office of the Dean of the Col¬lege has established an informationpushcart, where newcomers tocampus can purchase t-shirts, juice, orUniversity memorabilia, includingpennants, decals, and sports hats.Greg Greiff, a third-year student inthe College, operates the pushcart,dispensing information and goodsfrom 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 7 days a week.His wages come from work-studyfunds. Because of a broken wheel, thecart will remain stationed at thecenter of the quads, rather than cir¬culate around campus, until autumnor cold weather arrives.No comp sci degreesbefore faculty hiredA University source has brought to the at¬tention of the Maroon that no degrees will beawarded in the new department of computerscience until there is a tenured faculty inthat department. It is expected that no grad¬uate degrees will be awarded for at leasttwo years, and no undergraduate degreesfor at least five years.CorrectionIn the July 1 issue of the Maroon, we mis¬takenly reported in “Dem candidates to de¬bate that State Rep. Larry Bullock’s ballotposition for the July 26 Democratic Congres¬sional primary was line #12. Instead, StateSen. Charles Chew is on line #12, and Bullockis on line #11. We regret the errorSportsIM SoftballLeading Teams(after one week of play)Men’s M-W DivisionJimmy’sSee Your FoodMen’s T-Th DivisionMediciStat’s RatsCo-ed M-W DivisionThe PubB.S. HittersCroziersCo-ed T-Th DivisionPro-FeesPenguinsCo-ed M-W Division ScheduleJuly 156:45 — The Pub v. Croziers July 185:30 — Paint Hat v. Naughty Sweeties5:30 —Mingling Oral Secretions v. Crozie6:45 — The Pub v. Sue the B’s July 205:30 — Naughty Sweeties v. Croziers5:30 — The Pub v. B.S. Hitters6:45 —Mingling Oral Secretions v. PaintHat5: 36 — Penguins v. Whaling Whales6:45 -Pro-Fees v. Stubblefeld Irregulars 5:30 -Aspo In Exile v. Whaling Whales5:30 — Pro-Fees v. Penguins6:45 — Visitors v. Stufchlefeid IrregularsMen’s M-W Division ScheduleJuly 155:30 — The Pub v. Fat City NineJuly 185:30 — Bottone’s v. Jimmy’s6:45 — Line Shot v. Fat City Nine6:45 — The Pub v. See Your Food July 205:30 — Jimmy's v. Fat City Nine6:45 — The Pub v. Fun Boy 206:45 — Line Shot v. Bottone’sMen's T-Th Division ScheduleJuly 155:30 — Team Huber v. Stat’s Rats6:45 - King Zoy v. Hyde-A-WayJuly 195:30 — Team Huber v. jpenguins6:45 — King Zoy v. Danny’s Boys6:45 — Stat’s Hats v. Fujita’s Echos July Zl5:30 - Penguins v. Hyde-A-Way6:45 — Team Huber v. King Zoy6:45 - Medici v. Stat’s RatsSox trail behind Texas, 1 Vi games outBy Cliff GrammichThe Sox lost 8-0 to Toronto last night, andare 1M> games out after the Texas Rangersbeat the New York Yankees. Because of theBaltimore Orioles’ victory over the Califor¬nia Angels, the Sox are still in second placebehind Texas.The Sox moved into the second place posi¬tion Wednesday night, and pulled within ahalf-game of Texas, when they comple¬mented a three-game sweep of the Cleve¬land Indians with a 5-1 victory.LaMarr Hoyt was the key to the finalgame of the Indians’ series. Hoyt pitchedthe complete game, the third straight for theSox, yielding just 1 earned run on 7 hits.Hoyt noted “I haven’t had much luckagainst this team in my career,” and he“figured I was due for a good game” againstthe Tribe. The White Sox got on the scoreboard in the1st inning, as centerfielder Rudy Law tri¬pled and scored on catcher Carlton Fisk’sground out to short. Ex-Cub and Sox PatTabler tied the game for the Tribe in the 5thinning with a solo home run to the left fieldlower deck.The White Sox pulled away in the 7th in¬ning, scoring two runs on right-fielderHarold Baines’ double and 3rd-basemanVance Law’s sacrifice fly to left. Chicagoput the game out of reach in the 8th inning,scoring another two runs on lst-basemanMike Squires’ triple to center and switch-hitting pinch-hitter Jerry Hairston’s doubleto left. The hit was Hairston’s first right-handed hit of the year.Hoyt believes that the key to White Soxpennant hopes is the starting pitching. Henoted that White Sox pitcher “has to throw like we’re capable of throwing. I don’t thinkany of us are throwing like we’re capable ofthrowing.”Commenting on his duel with Clevelandpitcher Bert Blyleven, who at one point re¬tired 14 consecutive Sox batters, Hoyt saidhe “concentrated on what I was doing well,and kept on doing it. I knew if I kept us with¬in a run or two, we were capable of winningit in the late innings.”The Sox continue their drive for the top ina 4-game series against the Blue Jays. Lastyear. Chicago won 4 of 6 against Torontoboth in Comiskey Park and Exhibition Sta¬dium. The White Sox have faced the BlueJays 4 times this year, splitting a pair ofgames in Toronto and dropping both deci¬sions in Chicago. Toronto ace Dave Stiebwill face Chicago’s Richard Dotson in to¬night’s game at 7:30 pm. WtCSALE DATES JULY 20-231 GALLON JUGCL0R0XBLEACH t32 oz.EAGLE RIVERBLENDED JUICE5Vz OZ.ZESTBEAUTY BAR397999'2/99'3598915928 OZ. JARFOLGER’SINSTANT COFFEE16 OZ PLAIN/VANILLADANN0N rneYOGURT8 OZPHILADELPHIACREAMCHEESE8 OZKRAFT'S NATURAL SHARPCHEDDARCHEESE6 °ACKLENDER'SBAGELS 2989GLENMARK GYROSPATTIESU S D A CHOICESHORT RIB 149OF BEEFU S.D A CHOICEBEEF 129CHUCK STEAK 1 ,,U S. INSPECTEDPORKBUTT ROAST . ..U S. INSPECTEDPORKSTEAKS 11l191 29Special FeatureNATURAL FOOD PREPARED WITHOUT MEATDEMONSTRATION FRI. & SAT. 7/22, 23FINER FOODS.SERVING53rd PRAIRIE SHORESKIMBARK PLAZA 29M VERNONWhere Von Are A Sharper But,Once’The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 1983—9CalendarFRIDAYSUMMER NIGHTS: Light Opera Workspresents “The World of Gilbert and Sullivan”with selection from the Mikado, Princess Ida,Pirates of Penzance, and more. 8 p.m. HutchCourt $5 general, $3 student & senior citizen,50* Lawn Chair Rental. Tickets call 962-7300SOQ FILMS: The Howling 7:15 & 9 p.m. Cobb$2International Folkdancing: General LevelINH Parking Lot (rain-inside). Teaching 8p.m., Request dancing 9:45Court Studio: Round and Round the Gardenby Alan Ayckbourn 8 p.m. $7, $9 call 962-7300PUB: Pete Braun Jazztet 10-Midnight.Members 21 +.SATURDAYSUMMER NIGHTS: Light Opera Workspresents ‘The World of Gilbert and Sullivan”with selections from the Mikado, PrincessIda, Pirates of Penzance, & more. 8 p.m.Hutch Court $5, 50* Lawn Chair Rental. Tick¬ets call 962-7300A City Enthralled Arts Revue: Santez, tenorsacophonist, & Carol Freebyrd, artist. 9 p.m.Blue Gargoyle $3 at door, $2.50 in advance.Call 667-4285Court Studio: Round and Round the Gardenby Alan Ayckbourn. 8 p.m. Reynolds Club.$7, $9 call 962-7300SUNDAYOriental Institute Films: Iran: Landmarks inthe Desert 2 p.m. Museum Aud. FREETalking Pictures: Grande Illusion 8 p.m. I-House $2Court Studio: Round and Round the Garden 3& 7 p.m. Reynolds Club. $7, $9 ($4 studentrush 15 minutes before performance on Sun¬days).Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service ofHoly Communion 9 a.m.; University ReligiousService, Bernard O. Brown preaching, 11a.m.; Carillon Recital 12:15 & 4 p.m.I-House: Odomankoma Kyerema CulturalTroupe from Ghana, West Africa, 4 p.m. $5,$2.50 (kids 1-10) Info 753-2274MONDAYHillel: Tisha B’Av worship + reading of theEicha (Book of Lamentations) 8:30 p.m. (or¬thodox and conservative).International Folkdancing: Beg. & Int.Levels. Teaching 8 p.m., Request Dancing 9:30 p.m. INH Parking Lot or inside (rain).PUB MOVIES: Taxi Driver 7 & 10 p.m.Members, 21+ . FREETUESDAYSAO Noontime Concert: Peggy & Brian Hy¬land w/guests Carla & Matt Owens—IRISH(and Scottish) FOLK MUSIC 12 p.m. HutchCourt freeOpen Circle Theatre Co.: 2 One Act Plays byTennessee Williams and Samuel Beckett. 8p.m. INH 3rd FI. Theatre. $2, $3. Tickets atdoor.Hillel: Tisha B’Av worship and reading of theEicha (Book of Lamentations) 7 a.m. & 7:30p.m. (orthodox)PUB MOVIES: Casablanca 7 & 10 p.m.Members 21 +. FREEDOC: Meet John Doe 8:30-10 p.m. INH GymBiochem. Dept.: Dr. Torsten B. Helting, San-doz Research Institute, Vienna on “TetanusToxin: Structure and Properties of the Holo-toxins and its Papain-derived PolypeptideFragments” 4 p.m. CLSC 101WEDNESDAYSAO: Open Circle Theatre presents two oneact plays by Tennessee Williams and SamuelBeckett. 8 p.m. 3rd FI. INH Theatre. $2, $3.Tickets at door.Smart Gallery: Opening of “Saul Steinberg:Drawings and Watercolors from the HallmarkCollection” and “The American ComicStrip” 10 a.m.-4 p.m. CWAC. FREECareers in Medicine: Arthur Kohrman, pro¬fessor & asso. chairman, dept, of pediatricsand director of La Rabida Childrens Hospi¬tal, on “Healthier Children” 4 p.m. Harper130SOQ Films: Laura 8 p.m. Cobb $2PUB MOVIES: Caberet 7 * 10 p.m. Members21+ . FREETHURSDAYNoontime Concert: Aklo Sfesajima — jazz trio12 p.m. Hutch Court FREESAO: The Open Circle Theatre Co. presents 2one act plays by Tennesse Williams and Sa¬muel Beckett 8 p.m. INH 3rd FI. Theatre. $2,$3. Tickets at door.Oriental Institute Special Tour for Kids:“Kings of Ancient Times” 10:30 a.m. Museumlobby. FREELSF: The Red Shoes 8:30 p.m. Law School$2Rockefeller Chapel: Carillon Concert 7:30p.m.PUB MOVIES: Star Trek II 7 & 10 p.m.Members 21+ . FREEPHOTO BY KAREN AXTThe Roberto Clemente High School Steel Band played in Hutch CourtTuesday in the summer noontime concert series. i4 3-wyJtnf ^ (j/{as/of/n y^hf/'o/nj £%ea/ (ski/a/e ^V 493-0666 • CALL ANYTIME57TH & HARPER TOWNHOUSEJust come on... 8-room brick, tri-level,"E" plan. Large yard. Aircond.p=nn;;:- :_r *r,r‘ill 11 $120,0002,000 SQUARE FEET OFLOVELY SPACE7 rooms, fireplace, formal D.R., newkit., nice floors, all for$69,000Nr. 48th and GreenwoodTO SETTLE ESTATESmall townhouse, small price! This is a $59,500co-operative! 2 bedrooms plus study.ON THE BLOCK WHERE YOU LIVE...is famous Regenstein Library and other U of Cfacilities. 56th & University. Woodburning fireplace,den, 2 bedrooms. Excellent long-standing co-op.$44,500“HEDGEROW”is our newest duplex condo at 54th & Hyde Park.Central air, central garden, nice floor plan, 3bedrooms, oak floors. Tree-Top views. New, New!$110,000GET AWAY FROM THE CITY....or get above it all on high floor of "CornellVillage". 5201 Cornell. Doorman, inside garage,saunas, hospitality areas. Unusually large livingroom has terraced view of blue lake Michigan andwestern skies. A real "pass-through", 3-bedroomapt. Gourmet kit.$105,000PRICE REDUCATION INEAST VIEW PARKon 3-bedroom, 2-bath, "square plan," Oak floors.10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 1983Classified AdsSPACECOOP 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-tour 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.CHICAGO BEACH APTS.5100 S. Cornell Ave.I Offers comfortable living at reasonable price.Newly remodeled kitchen. Some apts. offersview of the lake downtown. 24 hr. security, Viblock from bus & train. Available for inspec¬tion from 10 am to 6pm. 1 bedrm. $380/mo eff.$280/mo. All rents include utilities. Call 493-7896 or Parker-Holsman Co 493-2525.ONE BEDROOM 4- studio apts $220 $295. stu¬dent rate avail. 684 5030 by 8:30 am or 493-2329pm2Vi apt avail, ideal for couple or grad, or willshare, furn. Indry, safe quiet bldg, fall opt,$330/mo, 5417 S. Woodlawn Ave #2A, Call 363-75022-bdrm apt, 54th & Greenwood, $475. 241-7208 4-bdrm apt, 51st & Kimbark. 2 baths nice sunporch. Huge. $700.684-5030,955-9355.3-bdrm condo, 54th & Greenwood. Nice layout,south light in every room. $52,000 324-6183.52ND& KIMBARKOne bedrm. apts. for rent. Near shopping andthe University. $265-$275/Mo. One monthsecurity deposit. Call Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525Beautiful small condo for rent across the streetfrom IH on Blackstone. Available August 1 Call947-0732CONDO FOR SALE56th + Kimbark: 2 Bdrm, Eat-in Kitchen, Pan¬try, Full Dr, Oak Firs, Sunny, Courtyard,$62,000 Call 876-3512 DaysMidsummer sublet: 1 bdrm in friendly, quiet,coed apt, 56th & Kenwood. Rent & dates negot.Avail July 28 thru Sept. 20. Marine 667-8948.(possible fall option)For Sale by owner: 7 rms sunny Ray Sch lowassessmts $52,000. 955-4992APT FOR RENT-HYDE PARKA fine 1 bedroom apt. Vi block from all yourshopping needs 4- 4Vi blocks from U of C. Rent$380/mo & up. 53rd & Woodlawn. For inspec¬tion call 643-6428 or Parker-Holsman Co. 493-2525Condo for rent. In Kenwood 7 Rooms, 2 Baths.Excellent Building. Modern Kitchen; woodburning fireplace. Residents are professionalsand academics. $700/mo. 324-5116 or 861-1179.Studio Apartments $250. Hild Realty 955-1200Summer Sublet w fall option. 1 br in 2 br apt.$157/mo. 53rd & Kenwood. Call 363 4961.LARGE 1 BR apt. near 55th and Cornell. $3154- util. Starts around 1 Aug. References req.Call: 493 2179, 947-9428 (after 7 PM).One bedroom in Huge apt., $150/mo. 4- utils. 54-f Greenwood, avail, now 288-0546.CLOSE TO CAMPUSRecently renovated one bedroom condo inbeautifully maintained security building.Modern kitchen, bath; w/w carpet; lowassessments. $39,000 Phone 241-5198Studio near U of C avail. Sept. 1 $275. Neat gradstud. pref. 241-6875Mature female grad student or workingwoman to share 2 bedroom/2 bath apt at 5050 S.Lake Shore. Air cond. Rent $305 avail Aug. 1,947-0332 evenings or Sunday.APARTMENT FOR SALE. 3 bdrms, enclosedsunporch, good bldg, 2 blks from Law School,new kitchen and bath, 61 4- Kimbark, $23,000,evenings, 955-1427.Quiet non-smoking ROOMMATE WANTED toshare 2 BR apt. Walk to UC. Avail. 8/1 for 6mos. or less. Maybe longer. $287. Karen 2-7566,752-5033.FOR SALE, 1 bedroom condo & garage space.University Park, 9th floor, owner financing,$42,500. 485 2824► Renovated 3 bedrm condo for rent in Kenwood.Sunny, 200 sq ft. 2 baths, din rm, sunrm, newkit w/dishwasher, woodbrn frplce, hardwoodfirs. On campus bus rte. Pets ok. Avail 9/1 or9/15. $850. Mr. Zelman 0:726-9490; H :440 0514.RENT 2 bdrm 2 baths immaculate air condparquet floors levelor blind stove range refrigdisposal dishwasher Security Transportationand Shopping at door Consider long lease $680mo incl heat 984-3525 or eves 536-04761 rm in 4-BR apt. 5 min from reg. $1004-util.available for immediate occupancy 288-2145.1 bedroom apt on Midway Available mid-August Call 493-6780 after 5 p.m.Furn Lg Cl Rms/Apt No Smok From $200 363-3458Very Ige studio avlb immed in newly remodel¬ed build, nr Ik MUST SEE It's a steal. 643-0439.SPACE WANTEDGRAD. Lib. student seeks to share unfurnhse/apt bear campus starting Sept. 1st. WriteEric Holzenberg 195 13 St. N.E., Atlanta, Ga.30309Looking for a room in apt. or house with otherstudents, near campus - Aug or Sept. CallSusan, 493-0452 or 477-8111 and leave message.APARTMENT EXCHANGE-PARIS, FRANCE2 bdrms, 2 baths luxury apartment located inthe center of Paris. Will exchange for similarquarters near campus for Fall and WinterQuarters. Call 962-8925, days.GARAGE WANTEDSpace in garage wanted in the Hyde Park/Ken¬wood area. Call Hugo 363-4341, 962-8488.FOR SALEPASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAIT!Model Camera 1342 E 55th 493-6700.Moving sale 16-17 jul. color TV, crib, sofa,desks, chairs, rugs, chests, car-seat, com¬forters, more..4- Buick Skylark 69 G. RC. 241-6798VW 77 RABBIT 4 spd., 63,000 mi., good cond.MUST SELL LEAVING U.S. 7-23 $1800 ph. day962-1328 night 955-5182'78 Rabbit Diesel Deluxe sunroof amfm verygood shape 52600/offer Young boys 24 Raleigh10 speed bike $80 boys 1 speed $20 288-7243FORD 75 Granada, 6 Cyl, 4 Dr., Air Con, PS,PB, AM/FM, 8 TR, $1100, 288-1027For sale: Kenmore portable WASHINGMACH IN E • $150. Call 288 4585 or 962-6750.Moving. Must sell 12 x 17Va ft. nylon rug withpad. Very good conditions; $100 or best offer.947-9428 after 7 PM.PEOPLE WANTEDPaid subjects needed for experiments onmemory, perception and language processing.Research conducted by students and faculty inthe Committee on Cognition and Communica¬tion, Department of Behavioral Sciences.Phone 962-8859. Afternoons.Incest Survivors Group for women is now for¬ming. For information call Annette 561-6931.Male research subjects needed to participatein a study of some effect of a commonly usedrecreational drug. Volunteers will be testedonce weekly for 3 weeks and must remain inhospital overnight. (5:30pm-8:30am) for eachtest session. For information call Lee: 962-1535Subjects needed for psychology experimentson decision making. $3.50/1 hour. Call 962-6026.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES and has a memory. Phone955 4417.JAME BONE, EDITOR-TYPIST, 363-0522.PROFESSIONAL TYPING, Reasonable 6846682.Passport photos while you wait. On campus.Other services available. 962-6263.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Large or smalljobs. Competitive prices. 324-5943, 667 4285.FLOYD'S DECORATIVE SERVICEInterior & Exterior Very Neat & Professional Best references Very Reasonable Over 20years In The Hyde Park Kenwood Area CALLFLOYD 221-5661MOVING & HAULING. Discount Prices.Free—Packing Service. Free—Estimates.Free—Packing boxes & crates delivered. N/C.Free—Padding & dollies. References. Call Bill493-9122.Weddings photographed. Call Leslie at 536-1626.UC GRAD STUDENT available for child careand/or housework. EXCELLENTREFERENCES. Resonable Rates. 752 2003. orleave message: 241-6916TYPING - fast, friendly 8. accurate. Researchpapers, resumes etc. Pick-up & del. 924-4449INCEST SURVIVORS SUPPORT GROUP:For women who have experienced incest whilegrowing up and would like sharing and supportof small group of women with similar ex¬periences. Begin Aug. 2, Tues. eves. ChicagoCounseling 4- Psychotherapy Center. BarbaraRoy. 684-1800.PROGRAMMER/TUDOR avail for longterm/short-term part-time work. Exp. on Ap¬ple II4-. Dec-20, Amdahl, in BASIC, FOR¬TRAN, Assembler plus many softwarepackages. 4 info call 493-5287.Qual. childcare home with small group of 2year olds. Excellent educational situation 493-8195.ABM SECRETARIAL SERVICE. ExperiencedTypists. Reasonable Rates. GENERAL,LEGAL, STATISTICAL Typing Welcomed.CALL Addie 225-9077.PETS_FREE 3 yr old male CAT. Neutered house-broken vaccinated. Call 288-4585 or 962-6750.LOST AND FOUNDWoman's watch found on campus during lastweek of June. Call 962-8965 (Days) to claim. PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIOPortraits, Weddings, and Special Events arenow being booked by Hyde Park's newest por¬trait studio. Call and speak with Ron Milewskiat The Better Image.1344 E . 55th St. 643-6262KIDSNEEDED!If you are a 4th or 5th grade left-handed boy, a7th grade right-handed boy, or a 6th graderight-handed girl—WE NEED YOU! Be in afun and profitable study. Call 962 8846 9-5 fordetails.DOES YOUR MINDMATTER?It does to us. People needed for paid participa¬tion in studies on the difference between theright and left sides of the brain. Both right andleft-handers needed. If you have called before,call again to be on our summer list. Call 962-8846 9-5.DANCE FROM GHANABy the International Children's Dance Theateron National Tour from West Africa Sun. July 174:00 pm and Fri. July 22 7:00 pm at 1-House1414 E. 59th St. Ticket Info at 753-2274.PUB MOVIES4 CONCERTMon-Tax/ Driver. Tues Casablanca.Wed .-Cabaret. Thurs .Star Trek II. 7-1-10 pm.Fri. Concert: David Swain 4- Angela Smith-folk guitar vocals. Members, 214-.GAY? LESBIAN?The GROUP meets every Tues at 9pm for talk4- refreshments. Call 493-2970 for location.GALA summer office hours 5-8pm MWTh, 3rdfl. Ida Noyes. Tel. 962-9734.IS YOUR CHILD EXCITED ABOUT GOING BACK TO SCHOOL?Phoenix School, a one-room school housein Hyde Park provides:— small class site — multi-age grouping, 5 to 11— warm, supportive learning — parent governedenvironment — curriculum designed for our children— experienced teacher955-2775 daysFor a school kids really like call: 493-8207 eveningsIMAROON\ 9629SSSThe Chicago Maroonwill publish two more issuesthis quarter:Friday, July 22&Friday, July 29thThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, July 15, 1983—11. . ■ . — II0£IZ£9£ :au;7sapinpoy-p££6'Z96ll°D‘md£-mx>6 :smoyjssduisng'UOjqsd^o^jopjgig*iuguips^DDO]si (OVS)SOUJOS311IAUOVJLNSaniS3HJ. 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