grey city ——OH, BOWIEpage five— J'MaroonSOVIET MILITARYpage fiveThe Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 8 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, September 30, 1983Kent Photo by Charles Coant Radioactivity overblownAug crimeBy Jeff EricksonSince August 12, two peoplehave been murdered in HydePark near the Universitycampus.There has also been a rash ofburglaries around campus, al¬though according u> RobertMason, Law Enforcement Co¬ordinator of the South EastChicago Commission, therewere 26 percent fewer rob¬beries during August- Sep¬tember than at the same timelast year.The two murders were com¬mitted within two blocks of oneanother, just off campus. Ste¬ven Mitchell, a University ofChicago security officer, wasstabbed to death the night ofAugust 12 near 56th and Harperwhile responding to a report ofa man behaving strangely.Seriously wounded in the inci¬dent was Chicago Police Cap¬tain Richard Dwyer, who hassince fully recovered.Facing trial for the slaying isLorenzo Turner, a forty yearold Vietnam veteran who hadpreviously undergone psychia¬tric therapy and purportedlywas frightened by men in uni¬form. Mitchell, 33, was the firstUniversity of Chicago securityman ever to be killed in the lineof duty.Three weeks later, 21 yearold Timothy Holmberg wasbeaten to death in his base¬ment apartment at 5600 S.Blackstone. Holmberg’s fa¬ther, Dennis, was also beatenin the attack and has been list¬ed in critical condition. Policehave been unable to talk withDennis Holmberg and have fewleads and no suspects in thecase, with robbe'y as the ap¬parent motive.However, there have been noreported incidents of rape nearthe campus. Mason stated.“There were a couple of rapesin the northwest sections ofHyde Park, around 50th andDrexel, but nothing aroundcampus. We’ve been very for¬tunate.”“There have been a terribleamount of burglaries aroundHyde Park recently, though,"Mason continued. “One pat-leril of OUl glui iva cmci gi*ig in rate risesvolves theft of large amountsof property, stuff you justcouldn’t carry down thestreet.” Mason suspects theburglars are using a taxi cab ora van to get away. “If anyonesees a cab parked in an alley,call the University of ChicagoPolice or the Chicago Police. ’Burglaries are increased byfailure of occupants to takesimple precautions. Masonurges residents of Hyde Parkto keep windows closed atnight, put good locks on alldoors, and call the police ifsomeone is acting suspicious¬ly.By Michael ElliottThe University of ChicagoMedical Center has acquired aone million dollar helicopterambulance, and plans to builda heliport on the roof of its newhospital at 5815 S. Maryland toexpand emergency medicalservice.The specially-equipped heli¬copter can transport patientsmuch quicker than a groundambulance because it canavoid traffic jams, icy roads,and other impediments whileflying directly from an acci¬dent site to the MedicalCenter’s expanded intensivecare facilities. Also, the heli¬copter and heliport will facili¬tate transfer of critically ill pa¬tients from outlying hospitalsas well as transport of donororgans for transplantation.Special nurse and physicianteams will staff each flight toprovide advanced life-supportfor the first time to suburbanand rural areas around Chica¬go.Currently, the MedicalCenter lands helicopters on theMidway and transports pa¬tients into the hospital eitheron foot or by ambulance. Ac¬cording to Dr. Donald King,Vice-President of the MedicalCenter and Dean of thePritzker School of Medicine,“Returning patients to an off¬site ground-level pad in snow',mud, sleet, and rain and trans¬porting them by ambulance to By Jeff TaylorOn a hot afternoon in August,a reporter for the KnoxvilleJournal investigating a mercu¬ry spill at the Oak Ridge, Ten¬nessee operation of the Depart¬ment of Energy’ “discovered”that several sites includingfour buildings on Universi¬ty of Chicago campus nd labsin the Argon*'' National Labo¬ratory, emv .co -aces of radi¬ation sightly higher than strin-gent new governmentrequirements. The sites wereused in the so-called “Manhat¬tan Project” to develop nu¬clear weapons during WorldWar II.Less than a week later, afront-page headline in the Chi¬cago Tribune proclaimed that“four U of C sites, nine Ar-gonne labs are radioactive,”and local camera crews con¬verged on the Universitycampus to investigate. Thestory was carried by both APand UPI and appeared innewspapers as far away asParis.Kent, Jones, Ryerson andEckhart Halls contain levels ofradiation slightly above“background”, or the levelthat occurs naturally in the en¬vironment. A 1982 DOE reportstated that residual radioacti¬vity in the buildings was so low— below standards in effect inthe mid-1970s — that no actionwas necessary until the build¬ings w’ere renovated or demo¬lished. An increasingly strin¬gent government radioactivityprotection policy, however,the Medical Center is a logisti¬cal nightmare. It requires mul¬tiple transferring of patients,which is antithetical to thebasic principle of minimizinghandling of the critically ill orinjured patient. The only reso¬lution to these problems is anelevated heliport.”But many people living nearthe proposed site do not see thesolution as so cut-and-dried.Worried about noise and pollu¬tion, subsequent propertyvalue drops from the new’flight paths over the Midwayand Washington Park, andeven about a crash resultingfrom treacherous winds in thearea, some residents of the5700 block of Maryland andDrexel have banded togetherto oppose construction of therooftop heliport.“They’re building this heli¬pad for the publicity as muchas for humanitarian reasons,”says Sophie Bloom of 5721 S.Maryland Ave. “We took avote at our last meeting, andthe consensus w as that we arenot against the helicopter land¬ing on the Midway,” she con¬tinued, adding “we are notagainst emergency medicalcare, but we do wonder whythe University could not con¬struct a tunnel under the Mid¬way for its patients as it isdoing under Ellis Avenue forits medical students.” Theblock organization has writtenletters of protest to Universityof Chicago President Hanna calls for even less exposure to“innocents”, those not en¬gaged in radiation experi¬ments.Vice President for Universi¬ty News and Community Af¬fairs Jonathan Kleinbard said“the story was blown out ofproportion, but the coverage,including the Tribune story,was basically factual.”Reports that the levels of ra¬diation in University buildingswere “not substantially dif¬ferent from a series of chest X-rays” were erroneous. LarryArbeiter, science writer forUniversity News and Informa¬tion, said radiation approach¬ing this level even after a yearof exposure is “absolutely im¬possible under any circum¬stances.”DOE spokesman BrianQuirke noted that “reporterswho try to create fear in peo¬ples’ minds and then ask themto respond to that fear aren’tdoing anybody any favors,”but said the radioactivity re¬ports were “not irresponsi¬ble.”Quirke said after the U of Cexperiments “we cleaned thebuilding up to standards thatwere in effect at that time.”Problems arose, he said, be¬cause new standards were im¬posed that decreased allow¬able amounts of radiation, and“this happened three or fourtimes.”The Radiological AssistancePlanning Program was initiat¬ed by DOE to establish aGray, Vice-President of Uni¬versity News and CommunityAffairs Johnathon Kleinbard.and Fifth Ward AldermanLaurence Bloom.Before construction of theheliport can begin, zoning lawsfor the hospital must bechanged. According to Klein¬bard, the University has ap¬plied for the needed alterationsand exemptions, and has re¬ceived a series of approvals.Now it must obtain permissionfrom the city planning com¬mission, which must hold anas-yet-unscheduled publichearing on the matter. Thoseopposed to the heliport are pre¬paring petitions to present atthe hearing.By Cliff GrammichThe University's adminis¬tration and members of AFL-CIO Local 321 reached agree¬ment recently on a newcontract for the majority of theUniversity’s tradesmen andcustodial workers. The Sep¬tember 19th ratification of thenew contract completed a ne¬gotiating process which Uni¬versity Director of Employ¬ee/Labor Relations Edward C.Coleman described as “verydifficult.”The old one-vear contractbetw een Local 321 and the Uni¬versity had expired August 31at midnight. During negotia “priority list” for clean-ups.Criteria for placement on thislist were level of radioactivityand number of people exposedat a given site.Quirke said “at least twoDOE press releases in 1976 and1978” told of the cleanup plansbut the first media attentionthey received was after their“discovery” this summer.Quirke said by “dredging up alot of old files” the Tennesseereporter initiated what be¬came worldwide coveragean event announced sevenyears before.“We knew we had the possi¬bility of an embarrassment —a story that might not make uslook very good,” Quirke said,"but the stories generally hadfacts straight.”The DOE has authorized$300,000 to remove residual ra¬dioactivity from the four build¬ings, and $10.6 million to cleanup Argonne. The cleanup willentail washing with soap andwater and scraping or remov¬ing contaminated sections ofthe buildings.photo by Charles CoantRyersontions for the new contract. Co¬leman said that the most diffi¬cult issues were negotiationsconcerning wage increasesand bargaining over healthcare programs for workers.Although the janitors andtradesmen are involved invarying types of work rangingfrom unskilled to skilled posi¬tions, both the tradesmen andjanitors have been in the pastand were this year covered bythe same contract, accordingto Coleman. However, Cole¬man would not elaborate onthe relation of the package’sbenefit with the positions of thevarious workers covered bythe contract.Heliport up in the airAFL-CIO, University agreeon contractIt’s FREE and it’s EASY!Take a FREESpeed Reading LessonTHIS QUARTER your readingassignments could take over 400HOURS. You could cut that time to100 HOURS or even 60 HOURS.!l£arn to JOYCE WAGMAN, who is a well known speedreading expert, and prior to forming her ownspeed reading school was the Director of astudent program for a nationally known speedreading company is coming to the U. of C. thisweek.SPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEEDSPEED READ WOULD YOU LIKE TO:cut your study time in less than 1/2raise your grade point average easilyhave more free timeread 3 to 10 times faster with better comprehensionTHEN JOIN US for ONE HOURand we’ll show you how - you’lllearn techniques in ONE HOURthat will save you hundreds ofhours this quarterYou’ve got nothing to loseand everything to gain.?—Th** Chicago Maroon Friday. September 30. 1983NEWS IN BRIEFRummage saleA fall rummage and plant sale of theHyde Park Neighborhood Club will betomorrow from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 5480S. Kenwood.Clothing, furniture, household items,and toys are being accepted at theClub. Sponsred by the Business andProfessional Auxiliary, the event is amajor fundraiser to support theagency’s social service and communityprograms. For more information, call643-4062.Senior infoTopics such as why to go to graduateschool, how to pay for it and how toapply will be discussed at a special pro¬gram “What Every Senior Needs toKnow About Graduate School,” Tues¬day from 7 to 9 p.m. in Social Sciences122.The speakers will be Edward Rosen¬heim, the David B. and Clara E. SternProfessor of English; Joseph Cropsey,professor of political science; andJames W. Lewis, Dean of Students ofthe Divinity School. The program is co¬sponsored by the College Dean of Stu¬dents Office and Career and PlacementServices.Intern programThe Graduate Intern Program willsponsor an informational meetingTuesday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. in Room201 of the Reynolds Club.The program places registered divi¬sional graduate students in part-time positions with Chicago businesses andnon-profit organizations.Answering questions will be: theGraduate Intern Program staff, a his¬tory student who has been coordinatingthe Junior Achievement program at a“Big 8” accounting firm, an economicsstudent who has been a research assis¬tant for the Chicago Hospital Council,and a political science student whoworked as a consultant for computerapplications for a market researchfirm.Stop smokingThe Behavioral Medicine Clinic is of¬fering a smoking cessation group start¬ing Wednesday. A behaviorally-orient-ed group support program will beused.The program was developed at theUniversity of Pennsylvania and con¬sists of eight sessions scheduled over atwo-month period. Initial interviewsare now being scheduled.The cost of the initial interview is $25,and the sessions are $15 each (total$120). For further information or an ap¬pointment call Harriet de Wit at962-1537, or Paul Camic at 962-1551.Book saleThe Hoffman Library at RodfeiZedek will hold a sale of severalhundred books Monday from 9:30 a.m.to 2:30 p.m.Subjects range from Judaica toAmerican history to fiction. For infor¬mation call 752-2700 during regularbusiness hours. NIH grants inHumanitiesThe National Endowment for the Hu¬manities has announced a new grantsprogram for individuals under 21 tocarry out their own non-credit humani¬ties research projects during the sum¬mer of 1984.The Younger Scholars Program willaward up to 100 grants nationally foroutstanding research and writing proj¬ects in such fields as history, philoso¬phy and the study of literature. Theseprojects will be carried out during the summer of 1984. The application dead¬line is November 15.Award recipients will be expected towork full-time for nine weeks duringthe summer, researching and writing ahumanities paper under the close su¬pervision of a humanities scholar. Thisis not a financial aid program, and noacademic credit should be sought forthe projects.A booklet of guidelines and applica¬tion instructions should be available forphotocopying at the campus studentplacement office, or from YoungerScholars Guidelines, Room 426, TheNational Endowment for the Humani¬ties, Washington, D.C. 20506.AUTUMN QUARTER1983INTRAMURAL SPORTSACTIVITY ENTRIES DimTouch Football (M) Oct. 5Volleyball (M,W) Oct. 5Tennis - s (M,W) Oct. 5Ultimate Frisbee (M,W) Oct. 5Table Tennis - s (M,W) Oct. 12Handball-s(M,W) Oct. 12Swimming (M,W,C) Oct. 12Badminton - s (M) Oct. 19Volleyball (C) Oct. 19Basketball (M,W) Oct. 26Badminton - s (M) Oct. 26Turkey Trot (M,W,C) Nov. 8Photo Contests (M,W,C) Nov. 30USED BOOK EXCHANGEBuy your books used andSAVE $$$Visit the PHOENIX BOOKSTORE in thebasement of Reynolds Club, 57th and University.FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 30 & SATURDAY OCTOBER 19 A.M.-7 P.M.an SAO serviceThe Chicago Maroon-Fridav, September 30. 1983—3editorialHeliport neededWe agree with the assessment of the University of ChicagoMedical Center that a heliport on the roof of its new hospitalis absolutely essential. The Medical Center treates criticallyill and injured patients from all of the surrounding area: it isthe only facility in Chicago capable of doing so.The current system of landing helicopters on the Midwayand transporting patients via ambulance or on foot causestime delay that may result in loss of life.Vice President of the Medical Center Dr. Donald King saidattempting to transport patients from the Midway in snow,rain or other severe weather conditions is “a logistical night¬mare.” We agree. The idea behind helicopter transport is tominimize time between injury and treatment; to balk at es¬tablishing a permanent heliport is to disregard this notionand risk the lives of those critically injured. loHoo H'tipAtr&Jbtm A__ e4fi«>Ae,rn/fc 5Cffct*7vaI&UT ootfrUtof/t itka$fart tffetrOfo us.m r\ ■\3/7 ^'Vf'vV't \ THE UWiO*/by Keith Horvath■ XT F.X NEWS I- |fComings and GoingsRussian sessionbiasedTo the Editor:International House, while practical¬ly on the University of Chicagocampus, constantly has students fromother Greater Chicago schools and itsinfluence extends far because of itswide-ranging activities affecting stu¬dents from many countries. When,therefore, announcement was madethat in celebration of its 50th Anniver¬sary, International House would spon¬sor a conference on “A Search for Solu¬tions: US—USSR,” high hopes could beexpected that this would be an eventworthy of the half-century celebra¬tion.Alas, this expectation is not fulfilledby the disclosure of the list of speakersfor this event in the registration invita¬tions now released. A full day of a key¬note address, four panels with twelvespeakers, and an evening session end¬ing with an address by Dr. ZbigniewBrzezinski, make up the announcedprogram. The panelists and speakerscan be characterized as almost com¬pletely one-sided, cold war, hawkish intheir positions with respect to US—USSR relations. Only one of the grouphas any reputation for divergent opin¬ion from the mass-type hysteria whichhas increasingly hyped up under theReagan Administration, and particu¬larly since the Korean airplane shoot-down.The conference announcement saysthat the anniversary event will bedirected to “a national audience of peo- ple from government,universities,business and media withactive student participation en¬couraged. “One would expect that aconference of this importance wouldoffer the challenge of speakers whohave some worthy different points ofview, rather than a line-up that borderson propagandistic presentation of one¬sided self-righteousness.F. Dale Pontius,political science Professor Emeritusof Roosevelt UniversityAgora defenseTo the Editor:I felt the review of the Agora in thelast issue of the Maroon was ratherharsh. The Agora can be a very roman¬tic restaurant if you sit on the balconywith a date and order Saganaki, aGreek cheese set aflame before youreyes by a splash of brandy andquelched by a squeeze of lemon.The Agora is also a hang-out for Chi¬cago and University policemen alike.They know that a choice of six kinds ofcream pie of the sort that can only befound at places like the Agora, can onlybe found at places like the Agora.The Agora’s menu is extensive andhas American as well as Greek fare.The Agora is the kind of restaurantthat reminds you that Hyde Park istruly a neighborhood and its most regu¬lar customers will attest to the factthat what it lacks in elegance it makesup for in warmth...and it does have awaitress that looks like Meryl Streep.Jessica Melone By Jessica MaloneAs time goes by the University ofChicago administration continues tochange and shift. Some people leave toforge their way elsewhere while otherscome to test their fortune here.Leaving the university is RichardGrose who has served as assistant toDean Charles O’Connell for the pastyear. Grose has been associated withthe University for several years invarious capacities. He worked as anadvisor in the college for three years,and, prior to that, while a graduate stu¬dent, he served as a member of theCommittee on Social Thought.One of the aspects of his position asassistant to O’Connell that Grose saidhe found particularly rewarding wasworking with the leaders of the Maroonand helping to arrange the financesthat make production possible. Howev¬er, in other ways Grose said he did notfeel the position was right for him. Hedisliked having to deny student peti¬tions and turning down requests forbureaucratic reasons. Grose feels “Noteveryone should or can be a bureau¬crat.” He says he leaves with regretbut relief as well.Some day he may return to academ¬ics, but for now he hopes to pursue acareer in the areas of writing and edit¬ing in which he did some work this pastsummer. He has no job lined up but hesays he would like to work in develop¬ment in Chicago, getting involved withfundraising and writing proposals.Also leaving the University adminis¬tration is Jeffrey Barton. Barton wasan advisor in the college for threeyears. He is a graduate student at theUniversity working towards his doc¬toral degree in English.Barton said he enjoys dealing withstudents and found it rewarding to beable to resolve problems and makeuseful referrals. He felt, however, thatthe amount of paper shuffling the jobinvolved made advisor/advisee rela¬tionships hectic.During his last year as an advisorBarton initiated and worked extensive¬ly upon the development of the Collegeforeign studies program. This programenables students from the Universityof Chicago to remain registered herewhile studying abroad. Previously stu¬dents had to take a leave of absenceand then petition to get credit forforeign studies. “We are now hookedup to Brown’s program of study in Italyat Bologna and Sarah Lawrence’s pro¬gram in Paris,” said Barton. Four U ofC students are now studying in this pro¬gram with a newly divised registrationcode that the Registrar actually ac¬cepts as valid. The option to remainregistered at the U of C while studying abroad will make it easier to maintainfunds for studies such as financial aidand loans.Barton has no particular job set upfor the future. He may come back toacademic administration, but for nowhe wants to spend some time on his ownwork and just concentrate on “being areal grad student” for awhile.There will also be a new addition tothe University this year. As of No¬vember, internationally known Dr.Robert Karp is expected to begin workas the head of an extended cardiova¬scular surgery and research programat the U of C Medical Center.Although he is particularly well-known for his work in heart-transplants, Karp has had experiencein all aspects of cardiac surgery. Karpestablished the heart transplant pro¬gram of the University of Alabama-Birmingham where he led a team thathas performed seventeen heart trans¬plants since November 1981 when theprogram began.Karp said that the UAB surgical pro¬gram was “one of the best anywhere”but that the University of Chicago of¬fered him the chance to build a new in¬terdisciplinary program in cardiaccare that will focus on “bedside appli¬cation” of advanced research tech¬niques. “Many of the advances wemake in knowledge about disease aremade at the bedside, and the patientbenefits.”The impact of his leadership is ex¬pected to be fast, strong, and exten¬sive. Dr. David B. Skinner, Chairmenof the Department of Surgery, says,“There is no doubt that Karp is recog¬nized as one of the outstanding interna¬tional leaders in cardiac surgery.”Though there is currently no activeheart transplant program in the Chica¬go area, Skinner said he expected Karpcould perform his first heart trans¬plant sometime this winter. Karp willalso introduce new programs in arryth-emia surgery and other types of com¬plicated cardiac operations.The Medical Center Department ofCardiology already has a well-estab¬lished program in the treatment ofheart failure but it is extending its sur¬gical and research programs even fur¬ther and will soon have a new cardiacintensive care unit, a new cardiac cath-etrization Laboratory, and a renovatedcardiac cathetrization lab for pediatricpatients.Karp feels that the Medical Center’sstrong backing is immunology and de¬monstrated track record in kidneytransplantation show that the Universi¬ty has made a major commitment toorgan transplant. He expects the newprogram to be a success.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chi¬cago. It is published twice per week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of theMaroon are in Ida Noyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304. Phone 962-9555.Anna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorSondra KruegerFeatures EditorPurnima DubeyAssistant Features EditorPeter OsterlundViewpoints Editor Linda LeeProduction ManagerChris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorAra JelalianPhotography EditorAssociate Editors: Michael Elliott, Koyin Shih, Guy Ward.Contributors: Steve Barnhart, Zlatko Batistich, Jane Burke, Wally Dabrowski, AmyEder, Jeff Erickson, Paul Flood, Mindy Greenstein, Keith Horvath, Judy Kim, ErikLieber, Kathy Lindstrom, Brian McDonald, Jessica Melone, William Mudge, RaviRajmane, Hilary Till, Jeff Wolf, George Woodbury.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday Senfember 30 19«3VIEWPOINTS“Fiddlesticks”: the Soviet military and historyBy Richard HellieNo one knows exactly how or why KAL flight 007was shot down, and that will probably never beknown. Thus we don’t know what the nature of thatdecision was. But whatever information was gath¬ered by the initial Soviet fighter pilots, it was proba¬bly not transmitted in full to Moscow. Some blamethat likely fact on some peculiar barbarity of theSoviet system, but I would be inclined to attribute itto the nature of conveying messages in large orga¬nizations. The message that reached Moscow prob¬ably was something like: “A plane has penetratedSoviet air space.”I also assume that the message was given to somepolitical figure, that the decision to shoot down theplane was not strictly a military one. If Andropovhimself did not take a phone call, some other civil¬ian leader who was ‘‘duty officer” at the time did.Be that as it may, the message was passed backout to the Far East, and the flight was “terminat¬ed.”We are only able to speculate about the sequenceof events because the process of decision-making inRussian and Soviet history has been and is veiledalmost completely. So in the case of flight 007 we donot know who the decision-makers were, what in-formatin they had (was it known to be a civilian airplane?), and why they responded as they did towhatever information they had. Similarly, in theMuscovite period of the 16-17th century, we do notknow who the decision makers were (was it the tsaralone, the tsar with his boyars, or selected mag¬nates acting in the name of the tsar?); we rarelyknow precisely what information they had, and whythey responded as they did. Archival records of thedeliberations of the ruler with his counselors ap¬parently were never kept, and relatively few peoplein high governmental circles have ever writtenmemoirs. Moreover, they have rarely talked withoutsiders who would then write things down.Nevertheless, I assume that the decision to shootdown flight 007 was made in Moscow. For at least400 years, there has been a tendency to make allimportant military decisions in Moscow. If we goback to the 16th & 17th centuries, we discover thatlocal military commanders in the field had almostno autonomy whatsoever. Strategic decisions abouthow battles should be fought were made in Moscowby civilian bureaucrats who had never been in thearmy. Sometimes they directed the Muscovitearmy into massacres. Regardless, tight controlfrom Moscow was maintained.The same thing was true during World War II.Stalin tried to direct Soviet military forces againstthe Nazis on a globe in his office. Local tank com¬manders could not communicate with one another,but had to direct such communication through Mo¬scow. This belief in the wisdom of the center hasbeen one of the major constants of Russian civiliza¬tion.Thus, if the local commanders acted on their owninitiative in the 007 episode, that would be a majordiscontinuity in Russian history.We must also be aware of the fact that Russianrulers since the 16th century have done their best toconvince everyone that they were in control. Part ofthe image is that what the center directs is best be¬ cause the ruler is infallible. The image of the ruleras God’s vicegerent was created in the early 16thcentury, and lasted down to 1917. Since then, theruler has been infallible because he is the agent ofhistory, an impersonal process discovered byMarx. For that reason, it is crucial to protect theimage of the ruler, not to allow any appearance thathe might have made a mistake or be a “bad guy.”So the Russian people under the tsars were led tobelieve that it was not the tsar, but “the boyars”who were responsible for mistakes. Now, under An¬dropov, we have been assured first that the decisionto shoot down the KAL flight 007 was made in thecenter, but not by Andropov himself, and later thatthe decision was made on the periphery, not by any¬body in the center at all.This leads to an important conclusion about the007 episode: if, by some reason, it was shot down onlocal initiative, we may be absolutely certain thatthe nature of the initiative is currently under re¬view and will soon be curtailed.My reading of Russian history tells me that it isinstitutionally inconceivable that the militarywould try to act autonomously and thereby embar¬rass the political authorities. For example, sometheorists hypothesize that “the military” mightwant to force Andropov to withdraw his latestarms-control offer, which might require the de¬struction of some new SS-20 nukes. I have difficultyconceiving that the political authorities would allowthe military to have any autonomy.Five hundred years ago the rules of Russia keptthe pretensions of military commanders in checkby having them directed by civilian ministers, whoat first were slaves, and then free, non-militarymen, in the 16th and 17th centuries. Never in the Im¬perial Period of Russian history, from 1700 to 1917,was there ever the slightest possibility of the ap¬pearance of a Napoleon. Under the Soviets, Bona¬partism has been made even more remote by thecontrol of the armed forces by the CommunistParty. Stalin may have feared the appearance of aBonaparte, and thus executed the leader of the RedArmy, M. N. Tukhachevskii, in 1937. Soviet LeaderNikita Khrushchev feared the popularity of Mar¬shal Zhukov, and had him purged. Any military fig¬ure who tried to embarrass the political leadershipwould certainly be aware of such facts, and almostcertainly would have a firing squad for hisreward.I also have difficulty conceiving that the Partywould allow the Red Army any autonomy in decid¬ing whether to shoot down an intruding air plane.We know that in 1960 Khrushchev was phoned be¬fore the Soviet rocket forces shot down the U-2 spyplane over Sverdlovsk in the Urals. Someone mayhave persuaded the current political authoritiesthat time is of the essence in responding to foreignintrusions and that therefore there is not time toconsult with the political authorities before the mili¬tary must take action. However, the lapse of 2.5hours would seem to contradict such an assump¬tion.The 007 episode reveals Soviet military man¬power and technology in action. The Soviets are onthe road to being the most educated, even over-edu¬cated people on earth. For example, they now have 120 military service academies, while the USA hasonly three. We cannot say what the educationallevel of the pilot who shot down the KAL jumbo jetis, but I am positive that it is far greater than theaverage soldier in the US armed forces.The Soviets are in command of scientific theory,knowledge, and education, but they have consider¬able difficulty putting it into practice. Obviously itis difficult to make peasants into hi-tech practi¬tioners in one generation. This might account forthe fact that a passenger liner may have been mis¬takenly shot down in the careless belief that it was aspy plane and peasants-turned-aviators just mightbe capable of such a thing. Moreover, we cannot besure that the pilot who shouted “fiddlesticks” be¬fore he shot down flight 007 was really as sophisti¬cated as his education might have made him, orthat his plane or rockets were as good as they mightbe. However, the crucial factor to remember is thatthey were adequate.Another point about the Far East Command: it isnot Moscow, it is not Kiev, it is not even Tashkent.Siberia since the seventeenth century has been thedumping ground for Russian refuse, the place ofexile for criminals and all manner of dissidents. Itis just not a place where people want to live. Wealso know that military personnel are bored todeath there, and want to leave. If the army workslike the rest of Soviety society, in which residentialchoice is one of the major incentives, the pilots inthe Far East Command may be the bottom of thebarrel, those who are there because they are dis¬ciplinary problems.Russia has largely been a taker throughout itshistory. Thus at least 95% of the ideas that went intothe education and technology that enabled theshooting down of the KAL flight 007 were imported.But what of Russia as a giver, as an active elementin world civilization?The nation that tells incredibly bald lies for daysabout the 007 episode is certainly more than a pas¬sive observer on the world scene. Obviously its ex¬pansion must be the number one element in Rus¬sia’s role in the world. Second must be messianicmissions engendered by its religions, first Ortho¬doxy and then Marxism. Orthodoxy did not propelthe Russians far afield. Marxism, however, hasbeen another matter. The Third Rome theory didnot lead to the Third International, but rather theOctober Revolution of 1917 did. The Soviets havebeen the major supporters of Third World libera¬tion movements for decades. Such stoking of thefires of discontent abroad has been one of the majorlegitimizing acts of Soviet power, both internallyand externally.It may be for this reason the Soviets have beenhysterical about the 007 episode, first in their deni¬als that anything happened, now in their insistencethat at least the flight was on an espionage missionfor the USA (and thus presumably a legitimate sub¬ject for “termination”). Those who worry aboutRussia’s image in the world would prefer a moreflattering image, for murderer of 269 people is not aflattering one.continued on page 29President and media mishandle soviet “barbarism”By David GoodmanAlthough the shooting down of Korean AirlinesFlight 007 took place within the current month, andhas been the topic of conversation in bar andclassroom alike, it appears the incident is alreadypassing into obscurity. This is only surprising be¬cause we the people still have yet to receive a fullexplanation of what happened. Not only does the So¬viet Union seem unconcerned about providing aconsistent explanation, but more importantly, theAmerican government and press are not now andhave not acted as if they were waiting for one.Certainly, the “bottom line” is that 269 civilianswere killed, and no explanation by anyone will jus¬tify those deaths. However the line above the “bot¬tom line” is why did it happen, and will somethinglike it happen again? Unfortunately, due to the mi¬shandling of the incident by the US government andpress, the first question will probably go unans¬wered and the second question will be answered un¬equivocally “yes”.The Soviets’ delays, stonewalling and eventuallies should have been enough rope to hang them¬selves in the eyes of the world community. Perhapstheir own mishandling of the incident would havebeen enough to push them towards explaining whatexactly happened. But President Reagan once defeated all hopes for a satisfactory explanation.Four days after the incident, while the Soviets werestill delaying and essentially digging their owngrave, President Reagan went on American televi¬sion to give the Soviets the tongue-lashing he feltthey deserved. “An act of barbarism...this attackwas not just against ourselves...this was the SovietUnion against the world,” the President pro¬claimed, with a tone very much like that of a fatherscolding his child. The American news media, bythis time, had already picked up on the dramaticaspects of the incident, displaying the grief of theAmerican families who lost relatives aboard theflight with the sensitivity of a side-show barker, andshowing us the patriotism of the American peopleas being exemplified by a barowner in Maine pouring out 27 bottles of Soviet vodka. As the press re¬peated the facts as presented by the US and Sovietgovernments, one wonders whatever happened tothe stereotypical reporter who would give up hisfreedom for a piece of unofficial information.After this reaction by the voices of America, whywould the Soviets feel beholding to the US to pro¬vide an explanation, when it is obvious that Ameri¬ca has already accepted the reason for the incidentas being general Soviet barbarity and unconcernfor human life. While this might indeed be the rea¬son, there is plenty of evidence indicating the Sovi¬ ets weren’t sure of what to do. The Korean airlinerwas followed by Soviet fighters for two and one-halfhours, and was not shot dow n until the last possiblemoment. This implies indecision somewhere withinthe chain of Soviet command unless one wants toassume it took the 45-year-old Russian pilot thatlong to aim. Their delays in accepting responsibili¬ty seems to imply that the Soviet government wasnot, as President Reagan stated, making a deliber¬ate attack against the world, since, if they were,would they not have immediately and confidentlyaccepted responsibility for it?Yet, the day after President Reagan's address ontelevision, in seeming reply to his remarks, the So¬viets admitted responsibility, insisting the planewas spying. Thus, all hope for a rational explana¬tion of the incident was lost between two sets ofstatements which leave little room for compromiseand apology. The relations between the two nationsare only slightly bruised, and the short memory ofthe American people is parallelled by People mag¬azine, which one week cries on its cover “Gettingaway with murder” and the next week tells us how-many people dress like Mr. T.David Goodman is a fourth year political sciencemajor in the college.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983—5To Ease The PainOf Summer’s PassingWe Have An Analgesic AtCOPYWORKSSPECIAL SEPT. 19th TO OCT. 15, 1983COPIES«•>£*(81/2" x 11", 20 LB. WHITE BOND)OUR FULL SERVICE COPY SERVICE USES FAST, LARGEFRAME XEROX COPIERS. QUALITY IS EQUIVALENT TO OFF¬SET PRINTING. 1 OR 2 SIDED. WE OFFER A WIDE SELECTIONOF PAPERS. BINDERY SERVICES, INCLUDING AUTOMATICCOLLATING, PLASTIC BINDING, CUTTING. COMMERCIAL,FULL OFFSET PRINTING AVAILABLE.S HIGH SPEED CASSETTETAPE COPYING2 Sided — 30, 60, 90 and 120 Minute Tapes Copiedin under 4 Minutes. See our Special Ad for Details.COPYWORKS, Ltd,IN HARPER COURT • 5210 S. HARPER • 288-2233 music-^mUsiomosic ^THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT of MUSICPresentsYOUNG COMPOSERS CONCERTDiane Ragains, Sopranoand the Chicago CamerataBarbara Schubert, ConductorJim Jacobsen: EtchingsMelinda Wagner: IntarsiaSchoenberg: Pierrot LunaireSUNDAYOCTOBER SECONDEIGHT PMGoodspeedRecitalHall5845 S. EllisAdmission is free. This concert is made possible by grants from theIllinois Arts Council, the Fromm Music Foundation of HarvardUniversity, and the Music Performance Trust Fund.* MUSlOMUSlOMdSlC t*NOTICE TO USERS OFLIBRARY PHOTOCOPIERSOctober 28 will be the final day to exchange old COPICARDS for the newVENDACARD.The agent providing photocopier services within the Libraries of theUniversity was changed in January 1983. The former agent’s photocopymachines used COPICARDS which were sold by the Library as a convenienceto students, faculty and staff. Since January 1983 the Library has been ex¬changing unused credits on COPICARDS for a card provided by the new ven¬dor that contains an equal number of photocopy credits. On Friday, October28, at 5:00 p.m. the Library will cease exchanging unused COPICARDS. Untilthat date, exchanges will be handled through the University Library office inRoom 181 of Regenstein Library between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00p.m., weekdays.COPICARD EXCHANGE CENTERRegenstein Library9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m., weekdays9:30 a.m. -1:00 p.m., SaturdaysClosed Sundays6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30. 1983 MUSIC•>MUSIC<1MUSIC^MUsICNEWS ANALYSIS «Ward and townshipelections key for ChicagoBy Cliff GrammichFifth Ward Alderman Larry Bloom’spossible state’s attorney candidacyrepresents just one battleground in the1984 primaries, which may greatly af¬fect the future of Chicago politics. Inaddition to the state’s attorney’s cam¬paign will be contests for DemocraticPresidential and Senate nominations,and most importantly for Chicago,elections for Democratic ward andtownship committeemen.The newly elected committeemenwill choose a new county party chair¬man when current chairman and 10thWard Alderman and CommitteemanEdward Vrdolyak’s term expires nextspring. Mayor Harold Washington willhelp mount a challenge to Vrdolyak’sleadership, believing that he can di¬minish Vrdolyak’s current City Councilstature by ensuring Vrdolyak’s ousteras party chairman, and thus gain anupper hand in the council power strug¬gle.One possible alternative that Wash¬ington may consider is pushing for se¬lection of 42nd Ward Committeemanand Cook County President GeorgeDunne as party chairman. Dunne hasbeen loyal to Washington since Wash¬ington’s victory in the mayoral pri¬mary, and Dunne ally and 42nd WardAlderman Burton Naturus has sidedwith Washington in the council strug¬gle. Vrdolyak beat Dunne, then the in¬cumbent chairman, in the 1982 contestfor the post.For Washington to succeed in such astrategy, he would have to get his allieselected as committeemen in black andlakefront wards. Most of the currentblack ward committeemen, elected in1980, were backers of Jane M. Byrne inthe February mayoral primary. Someof these, such as City Treasurer and20th Ward Committeeman Cecil Parteeand 34th Ward Alderman and Commit¬teeman Wilson Frost, have allied withWashington in common causes sinceFebruary; nevertheless, Washingtonwill endorse candidates in black and la¬kefront wards he can relv on in a show¬ down vote with Vrdolyak for the partychairmanship.Some Washington allies who wouldback him in a battle for control of theparty leadership have warmed to theidea of a Dunne chairmanship. 17thWard Alderman Allen Streeter, aWashington ally who plans to run forhis ward’s committeeman post, hassaid he would strongly consider eitherDunne or 8th Ward Committeeman andCook County Commissioner JohnStroger for the post. Remarkable inthis stand are that both Dunne andStroger were backed State’s AttorneyRichard M. Daley’s mayoral bid, whileStreeter backed Washington. Strogerwas the only black ward committee¬man to back Daley’s mayoral bid.Bloom, who just last November backedDunne’s Republican opponent forDunne’s office of Cook County Presi¬dent, said recently he believes Dunnewould be a good chairman who couldgain support from most factions in theOrganization.In addition to generating supportfrom Washington allies, Dunne couldalso garner votes of committeemenwho supported Daley’s mayoral bid.Dunne has allied himself with Daley inthe latter’s political campaigns since1980, and presumably Dunne couldgain support from committeemen whoare Daley allies and not strong Vrdo¬lyak allies, such as llth Ward Commit¬teeman John Daley, 18th Ward Com¬mitteeman John Daley, 19th WardCommitteeman and Cook County As¬sessor Thomas Hynes, and 23rd WardCommitteeman and 5th District Con¬gressman William Lipinski. Therefore,if Washington and newly elected com¬mitteemen with him were to backDunne, Daley allies could swing behindsuch a bid and oust Vrdolyak, whomDaley allies opposed in 1982 in favor ofDunne.However, committeemen electionsmay not be the only factor influencinga Dunne bid. If Bloom does challengeDaley, who will presumably seek re-election as state’s attorney, Dunne could face a dilemma. If he were toback Bloom, Daley allies may becomealienated and support Vrdolyak. IfDunne backs Daley, Washington andhis allies, who would presumably backWashington ally Bloom, may likewisebecome alienated. Bloom, though, hasrecognized that neutrality or support ofDaley may be Dunne’s only practicalchoice in a bid for the party chairman¬ship, and Bloom has hinted that Wash¬ington allies may not be upset at such aDunne strategy.The race for the Democratic Senatenomination may also play a role in apotential Dunne-Vrdolyak fight. Wash¬ington has said he will back the choiceof the state central committee for thenomination. State Sen. Phil Rock, aschairman of that committee, will pre¬sumably get the nod. Washington sup¬port of Rock for the nomination maysway Rock, the Oak Park committee¬man, to support Washington’s choice ina fight for the county party chairman¬ship.Nevertheless, such a Washingtonstrategy could hurt him with his stron¬gest supporters. Streeter has acknow¬ledged that most of the city’s blackvoters will probably either opt for USRep. Paul Simon or State ComptrollerRoland Burris, the largest black vote-getter in Illinois history, for the nomin¬ation. In addition, many independentswho spurred Washington’s mayoral bidand have supported most of his standsas mayor, would balk at supportingRock. Sam Ackerman, political chair¬man of the Independent Voters of Illi¬nois-Independent Precinct Organiza¬tion (IVI-IPO), a powerful lakefrontpolitical organization which has sup¬ported Washington, said there is a“real concern (among IVI-IPOmembers) that Rock doesn’t get IVI-IPO support.’’Support of Rock, though, may notcost Washington in a fight for control ofthe county party leadership. Bloom,who said he would not support a pri¬mary Senate candidate if he runs forstate’s attorney, said Rock has been “helpful’’ to Washington and Chicagoin Rock’s position as State Senate pres¬ident, which may indicate a softness inlakefront hostility towards Rock. Lake-front politicians would also more likelysupport their new-found ally Dunnethan opt for their long-time nemesisVrdolyak in a showdown for the chair¬manship.The fight for the party chairman¬ship, its relation with other contests, aswell as the Presidential nominationsweepstakes, point to yet another rol¬licking season of Chicago politics. YetWashington and his allies may realizethat a Dunne chairmanship could bringstability to the highly volatile Chicagopolitical scene.The Cook County Regular Democrat¬ic Organization and local governmenthave been intertwined for many years.Current results of this are clearly evi¬dent. If Vrdolyak were not party chair¬man, he may not have been able toform an opposition bloc to Washington,although many believe that Washing¬ton’s lack of preparation for an organ¬izational fight aided Vrdolyak’s ef¬forts. The party leadership can alsodirect monies towards endorsed candi¬dates in Democratic primaries, theonly real elections in Cook County dueto the total lack of Republican organi¬zation. One should not read too muchinto party leadership, though, for theOrganization has become fragmentedsince the death of Richard J. Daley.Washington and his allies, though,may believe that Dunne could stabilizethe Organization. Dunne would enjoysupport from the increasingly influen¬tial black vote; those voters who havesupported Daley, Hynes, and theirallies; as well as some suburban Dem¬ocrats. Yet the most important effectfor Washington to want Vrdolyak'souster would be to take away a leader¬ship position from a known enemy, whohas used that position to crystalize op¬position to the mayor, and give it to anally who would not resist Washington’sstrategies for governing.NEWSBloom to challenge DaleyBy Cliff GrammichFifth Ward Alderman Larry Bloom,seeking to advance what he calls a“basic political revolution” in Chicagopolitics, has said he may challengeCook County State’s Attorney RichardM. Daley in next year’s Democraticprimary for the post.Bloom told the Maroon, “It’s a timefor taking sides. Rich Daley has takenhis side with Ed Vrdolyak (10th WardAlderman, Cook County DemocraticParty chair, and nemesis of MayorHarold Washington, a Bloom ally). Thepublic will demand a chance to say ifthey want a state’s attorney whostands for the old ways of doing things,or someone who wants to bring reformto all levels of government, includingthe state’s attorney’s office.” Bloomadded that “the performance of the in¬cumbent does not live up to his pressbilling.” Bloom’s current dissatisfaction withDaley may date to last May’s battle be¬tween Washington and Vrdolyak for or¬ganization of Chicago’s City Council;however, neither Bloom nor Washing¬ton supported Daley in his successful1980 bid for the office.Daley, in gaining the post, had cap¬tured the Democratic nomination bytaking 40 of the city’s 50 wards, as wellas garnering strong support fromblack voters and voters on the city’sSouthwest Side. In the general election,Daley again did well with black andSouthwest Side voters. Although Daleydid not have the support of eitherBloom, Washington, or the Indepen¬dent Voters of Illinois-IndependentPrecinct Organization, which is power¬ful in Hyde Park elections, he did carrythe 5th Ward and had support frommany local independents, including State Rep. Carol Moseley Braun andState Sen. Richard Newhouse.Bloom and other original Daley op¬ponents, had appeared to have patchedrelations with Daley before last May’scouncil battle. After the council battle,though, many aldermen allied withWashington, including Bloom, wereirked by Daley when several aldermenwho had been allied with Daley in theFebruary mayoral primary sided withVrdolyak in the council organizationalfight. What role, if any, Daley played inthe Council battle is unclear, but manylakefront independents and black lead¬ers believe he may have been detri¬mental to Washington’s organizationalefforts.Bloom, if he seeks the post, wouldpresumably attempt to assemble thesame coalition of blacks and indepen¬dents which gained Washington his pri¬mary victory. How independents whosupported Daley in 1980 would react toa Bloom candidacy is uncertain.Phoenix: never to rise againBy Amy EidenIt is the Phoenix Bookstore’s lastgreat bargain. Friday and Saturday,Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, everything in thestore sells for 50% off. Plus free re¬freshments. The Phoenix (located inthe Reynolds Club basement) is sellingthe books collected in the Book Ex¬change and liquidating its stock.The Phoenix is calling it quits be¬cause last year it lost $17,000. ThePhoenix’ specialty, used books, nevercovered operating costs. But the sale ofrecords made up the difference.Last year people stopped buying re¬cords at the Phoenix. This year’s Reyn¬olds Club manager, Manisha Chaud-huri, said that the slack in record salesis a national trend. Cassettes sell well,but the Phoenix did not have the capi¬tal to add cassettes to its inventory. Ms. Chaudhuri also cited aspects ofUniversity policy which hurt thePhoenix. It was not allowed to adver¬tise off campus. And two years ago theuniversity vetoed its plan to sell sta¬tionery supplies. Ms. Chaudhuri be¬lieves that the University feared com¬petition with the University of ChicagoBookstore which is owned and operat¬ed by the University.The general manager of the Univer¬sity Bookstore, Mr. Laurence Arthur,said that he knows nothing about therelationship between the Universityand the Phoenix.“We tried to help the Phoenix in anyway we could — we gave them our text¬book lists so they would know whatthey needed. We are sorry to see themgo. There is a need for a used book¬store.” On the question of competition be¬tween the Phoenix and the UniversityBookstore, Arthur said that the Univer¬sity Bookstore did not view the Phoenixas a competitor because of the dif¬ference between used and new books.But students certainly used the Phoen¬ix as an alternative to the UniversityBookstore.One student commented, “Anyonewho charges 50< for a book returnshould be shot.”The president of Student Govern¬ment, Joe Walsh, said that StudentGovernment will work with the StudentActivities Office to arrange a book ex¬change twice per quarter. Bill aidsblack univ.By John VispoelThe US Congress approved on Sep¬tember 26 a blockbuster bill which willsignificantly decrease the severe fi¬nancial inequalities among and pre¬vent the closing of hundreds of Ameri¬can colleges and universities. Themajor issue addressed by the bill wasthe distribution of government endow¬ments which has been historically dis¬criminatory against black colleges anduniversities.The measure was initiated by USRep. Paul Simon (D-22), a candidatefor an Illinois US Senate seat, andchairman of the House higher educa¬tion subcommittee. His subcommitteeexamined the state of college endow¬ments in the US last year, finding thatthe 194 best-endowed universities ac¬counted for approximately $19 billionof the $23 billion endowed to all US col¬leges. As a consequence, more than6,000 colleges shared the remaining $4billion.A House panel found that the fundswere withheld mostly from small, pri¬vate colleges and colleges which havepredominantly black enrollment.Many of these colleges and universitiesare in severe financial danger, whichrenders them vulnerable to enrollmentdrops. Without a permanent endow¬ment, many of these universities willclose and others will have to cut backseverely on educational resources.The bill allows black colleges andcommunity colleges to apply for feder¬al matching grants for new endowmentmonies. Eligible schools may receivecontinued on page 10The Chicago Maroon—E riaav. .September 30, 1983—7,d>A TH€ D&L 70€KT€ND€D WG4Rcommct LewBausch A lomb’s newest soft lens£qq The extended wear contact de-▼ veloped for maximum comfortapair and outstanding durability Easyto insert and remove, and easy tocare forWe provide the finest qualityeyewear, and excellent service,at reasonable pricesWe also guarantee satisfaction,because we know you'll be hap¬py with our products But if thereis a problem for any reason, let usknow within 60 days We ll pro¬vide a replacement or refundEye examination availableby a registered Doctor of Optometry1056 W Wilson Av*271-57749515 S Wfcfltrn238 36601074 Mt Prospect PlazaMt Prospect259 9456TH€ NUMPGR Oh€ VWIUG ID GYGWG4R 1INCG 1941I ConventionalI hard lens $ 49^Bausch & LombSoflens * $ 59Toric Lens forastigmatism $ 99Polycon il gaspermeable lens $129Bausch & Lombbifocal lensPrice listed is for one pair $199JOne-day server onmany prescriptions ROOSEVELTUNIVERSITY’S GUARANTEE: If you don’tscore in the top 25%, takethe next course free.LSATGMATPREPARATIONCOURSES£ Prepare for October & December ExamsNow offered in: Loop, Arlington Heights,Evanston, Hyde ParkClasses begin weeks of:GMAT: Oct. 2LSAT: Classes now forming for theDec. ExamFor more information, call or write:312-341-3660800-223-2618Test Preparation CoursesRoosevelt University430 S. Michigan, Chicago, IL 60605In cooperation withThe National Center for Educational TestingGothic Crafts Back -to-School SavingsAdditional 10% OFF on all items with student identification **CAPTAINS’ BEDS>INE WOOD>159“ ALL PRICESARE FORUNFINISHEDFURNITURE(FINISHAVAILABLE)SPECIAL ITEM20% OFFWith StudentI.D.AllTwin beds are:75” long • 13Va” highAvailable in other sizesBOOKCASESBOOKCASES COME IN ANYSIZE YOU DESIRE.PINE WOOD30” x 11” x 36”30” x 11” x 48”30” x 11” x 60”30” x 11” x 72” $45°°$60°°$70°°$85°°Guaranteed Delivery from 2 to 4 weekson custom orders 30” High16" Deep36’ WideBIRCH OR ELMOur cloaks coma Insingle or doublepedestals, varyingfrom our simplest.2 pencil-drawers,to the complete setof file drawerswith built-inpigeon-hole topunit.SPECIALITEM20%OFF WITHSTUDENTI.D.FLOORP LAMPOffset HiLoBrass,soft pleatShadeRegular $49.99 ,Sale Price Lanf,P* TcrchicriFloor$39" Tent Hi. WGiaaa:Ajnfcer,CteerVwy•octet*39*H.-LolnaVLJ S0-J99 $3199Many other lamps availableof your CABINETS: Wall Units. 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DEMPSTER676-0131SUM SALK ENDS OCTOBER 4th8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983SAO Fall Discounts —Music & Dance/TheatrecDo The 1940 s Radio Hour — 4-*coCO a Broadway Musical ooSaturday Oct. 15th 8 p.m. COnP $9.75 tickets $12.75 w/round trip bus fare o\0oC\J Tickets on sale until Oct. 14th cFlOCentre East for the Arts - 7701 -A Lincoln Ave., Skokie CM Martha Graham Dance Co.Founded by the First Lady of American modern danceSaturday Oct. 22nd 8 p.m.Dress Circle - $15 1 xt Balcony Front - $171 st Balcony Middle - $ 12 1 st Balcony Rear - $9.25Tickets on sale until Oct. 10thAuditorium Theatre, 70 East Congress Parkway- £c CDD s A Raisin in the Sun •4—*co gO u. 25th anniversary production Z3ooCO.to a Tuesday Oct. 25th 7:30 p.m.u -tr $11 -Tickets on sale until Oct. 23rd -Oosio V,co £CO The Goodman Theatre - 200 South Columbus Drive nPoCM In the Belly of the Beast:Letters From PrisonJack Abbott/Norman MailerThursday Oct. 27th 8 p.m.$9-tickets $12 w/round trip bus fareTickets on sale until Oct. 25thWisdom Bridge Theatre • 1559 W. Howard St.A Christmas CarolCharles Dickens ClassicSunday Nov. 27th 8 p.m.$ 15-Tickets on sale until Nov. 21 stThe Goodman Theatre - 200 South Columbus DriveTicket Orders taken in Room 210 Ida Noyes HallPayment must be made by check only when order is takenFor more info, call 962-9554 • An SAO serviceStart getting more for lesswith the Chicago TribuneLiving on a college budget is tough...that’s why we’reoffering you the Chicago Tribune at up to 50% OFFthe regular delivered price.price per weekfull term one termorder orderDaily/Sunday $1.35 $2.00Daily Only .75 1.50Sunday Only 1.00 1.00But the savings don’t stop there. Every day the ChicagoTribune gives you money*saving tips on entertainment,travel and merchandise. And by helping you save through*out the year, maybe you’ll have enough money to takethat vacation this Spring Break!Order the Daily and Sunday Tribune for a full termtoday and we’ll send you a Free Chicago Tribune T*shirt.So pick up your phone and give us a call at 222*4100 toget your delivery started right away.(fhicago (TribuneFor home delivery, call 222-4100. MORRY’S DELI55th & CORNELLSUNDAY SPECIALFRESH FRESH FRESHBAGELS * BAGELS • BAGELSA?w A'-& 0each(min. 1 doz.)BUY 3 OR MORE DOZEN BAGELS -GET 1 DOZEN FREEBUY 1LB■ OR MORE OF LOX - GET1 DOZEN BAGELS FREEMORRY’S DELI5500 S. CornellVisit our other MORRY’S locations:MORRY’S in MORRY’S in MORRY’Sthe Bookstore Hutchinson Commons EL LUGAR5750 S. Ellis 1131 E. 57th St. 1603 E. 55th StThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983—9Medical center expands NEWSBy Steve BarnhartThe University of Chicago MedicalCenter will open new facilities this fall:the Arthur Rubloff Intensive Care Unit,Mitchell Hospital and additional park¬ing facilities. This expansion will notincrease the number of beds at theMedical Center, but will allow a conso¬lidation of existing clinical services inthe new facility and expanded academ¬ic research and teaching facilities inthe existing hospital.While inpatient care facilities arecurrently spread throughout the hospi¬tal complex, Mitchell Hospital willhouse virtually all inpatient services,with most surgery performed in theSurgery Brain Research Pavilion,completed in 1977.Several small labs will remain in theexisting hospital, but they will be con¬nected to the new laboratories via apneumatic tube system. Existing kitch¬en facilities will also continue to be uti¬lized, with bulk food wheeled to the newhospital where trays will be preparedand then sent to the appropriate flooron a vertical lift conveyer.The new emergency care facility isalready in use. Located at the intersec¬tion of Drexel Avenue and 58th Street,the facility contains two new emer¬gency rooms, one for adults ana one iuichildren. With 16,000 square feet of space, this new facility doubles thearea currently available for emer¬gency medicine.The new emergency facility will bethe only such center in the Chicagoarea with a decontamination suite,which will be used to treat patients con¬taminated by toxic chemicals. The sec¬ond floor of the intensive care towerwill house an eight-bed burn unit, thefourth floor a surgery Intensive careunit, the fifth a cardiac ICU, and thesixth a general medicine ICU.The existing emergency area will berenovated for use as a physical therapycenter. Other areas of the existing fa¬cilities will be used for research andteaching, and to house sections of theMedical Center currently located apartfrom the hospital. This will include of¬fices of Human Resource Managementand the Department of Finance, for¬merly located in Ricketts Laboratory,as well as the Student Mental HealthClinic, the Sleep Research Laboratory,and additional sections of Psychiatryand other departments. A student, fac¬ulty and alumni center will also be builtin the existing hospital.The dedication of the new hospitalwill be October 15, with an open houseOctober 16 for University employees,faculty and students. The Hospital offi¬cially opens October 22.Surgeon joins BillingsDr. Robert B. Karp, an internation¬ally known surgeon who establishedthe heart transplant program at theUniversity of Alabama-Birmingham(UAB), has accepted a position as headof the cardiovascular surgery and re¬search program at the University ofChicago Medical Center.Karp, 49, who has spent the last 16years at Birmingham, will take up hisduties at Chicago November 1, pendingcompletion of official University re¬view and action, said Dr. Donald W.King, vice president for the MedicalCenter and dean of the Division of theBiological Sciences and the PirtzkerSchool of Medicine.“We will be fortunate to have a sur¬geon and researcher of Dr. Karp’s skilland caliber to lead our new effort in thefield of cardiac care,” King said. “Dr.Karp will play a key role in making thisUniversity one of the nation’s leadingcardiac care and research centers andhis expertise will be vital to our plansfor expanding our organ transplantprogram.”Currently, there is no active hearttransplant program in the Chicagoarea.The University’s kidney transplantprogram is the largest in Illinois, andMedical Center officials have an¬nounced plans to begin within the nexttwo years programs in liver and pan¬creas transplantation as well as hearttransplants.Dr. David B. Skinner, chairman ofthe Department of Surgery, said he ex¬pected Karp could perform his firstheart transplant here sometime thiswinter.Karp, professor of surgery at UAB,has led a team that has performed 17heart transplants since the UAB pro¬gram began November 1981.At the University, he will lead a com¬prehensive program of cardiac sur¬gery, clinical care and research thatwill focus on all aspects of heart dis¬ease.“This represents a new commitmentby the University in expanding its pro¬grams in all areas of health care andstudy, in adult and pediatric treat¬ment, in diagnosis, pathology and re¬lated research,” said Skinner.Skinner added, “Dr. Karp has exten¬sive experience in all aspects of cardi¬ac surgery. He is particularly well-known for his work in hearttransplants, but his experience spansthe whole breadth of the field. He willprovide strong and vigorous leadershipto cardiac surgery and cardiac diseaseinvestigations at the University as wellas introducing new programs in hearttransplantation, arrhythmia surgeryand other types of complicated cardiacoperations.”10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September The Department of Cardiology has aprogram in the treatment of heart fail¬ure and Karp will help form the corner¬stone of a surgical program that willcomplement this and other medical ap¬proaches to heart disease.The Medical Center’s new effort inheart care includes a new cardiac in¬tensive care unit, a new cardiac cathe¬terization laboratory and a renovatedcardiac catheterization lab for pedia¬tric patients.Karp acknowledged that the UABsurgical program was “one of the bestanywhere” and his association with itwas happy, but he added the U of C of¬fered him the chance to help build aninterdisciplinary program in cardiaccare that will focus on the “bedside ap¬plication” of advanced research tech¬niques.Karp said, “The University has astrong program of cardiological re¬search and I think I can help translatethat into new techniques that will helppatients. The University has also madea major commitment to organ trans¬plant. This should be particularly suc¬cessful, considering the University’sstrong background in immunology anda demonstrated track record in kidneytransplantation.”Karp was born in Los Angeles and at¬tended Stanford University and theUniversity of California MedicalSchool at San Francisco. He held internand resident positions at the Universityof California Medical Schools at LosAngeles and San Francisco beforegoing to the University of AlabamaMedical Center.He was named Assistant Professor ofSurgery at Alabama in July 1969, Asso¬ciate Professor in October 1971 and fullProfessor in October 1974. photo by Brian McDonaldNew entrance to Billings Emergency Room located on 58th street.Hersh criticizes KissingerBy Koyin ShihSeymour Hersh, Pulitzer Prize win¬ning journalist now working for the At¬lantic magazine, spoke Wednesdaynight to an audience at the Isaiah-KAMtemple on 51st and Ellis. A 1958 gradu¬ate of the College of the University ofChicago and former resident of HydePark, Hersh is well-known for his in¬vestigation of the Mi Lai massacre in1968.Hersh has also investigated bomb¬ings in Cambodia during the early1970s, domestic spying by the CIA andthe Watergate scandal. His recent bookentitled The Price of Power: Kissingerin the Nixon White House has met withboth acclaim and criticism.His speech Wednesday focused onissues ranging from Watergate to theofficial White House reaction againstthe destruction of the Korean Air Linesjet flight 007 this month. However,most of the talk centered on his newbook.Expressing his distrust of the WhiteHouse and presidential politics in gen¬eral, Hersh took as his main theme theneed for integrity in government. “Icome to you tonight as a moralist,” hesaid, “it’s not whether a person is ademocrat or a republican, but whetherhe has integrity.”Hersh noted what he called a devel¬oping antagonism in the Nixon WhiteHouse between the president andHenry Kissinger. “The essence of thatWhite House was personal betrayal,”Hersh said. “This must inevitably getinto policy.”“In the later years,” Hersh said,“Nixon was trying to humiliate Kis¬singer publicly, “giving him wrong in¬formation and denying him access to necessary documents. Hersh saidNixon was known to be a racist, andoften made racial slurs against bothblacks and Jews in Kissinger’s pre¬sence. Kissinger is himself Jewish.Hersh attacked Kissinger on severalpoints, reiterating points made in hisbook. He said Kissinger used classifiedgovernment documents for his ownends, political and professional. Headded that Kissinger’s conduct as Sec¬retary of State was “completely con¬trary to everything he said.”Asked whether Hersh used a higherstandard to judge Kissinger becauseKissinger is Jewish, (Hersh is alsoJewish), he said “Inevitably, yes. Be¬cause he was a survivor of the Holo¬caust, because he was a professor atHarvard, I expected him to act morehonorably.”Hersh said Kissinger derived “a cer¬tain vicarious pleasure” from Israel’sconflicts in the early ’70s with its Arabneighbors. He said Kissinger enviedthe Israelis the opportunity to “mar¬shall their forces and conduct opera¬tions in a hot war, unlike the cold onehe was involved in.”About the Reagan AdministrationHersh said, “I’d rather have innocentincompetence than corruption.” Headded that “Ronald Reagan has a rep¬utation as a nice guy. But it’s clear thatsomeone who cuts off all social pro¬grams — makes it impossible forblacks, other minorities and all poorpeople to work — can’t be called any¬thing other than a son of a b—Hersh said he was disappointed inthe American press for not reactingstrongly against Reagan’s attack onthe Soviet Union following the KAL jettragedy.Bill aids black univ.continued from page vgrants of $50,000 to a maximum of$500,000. The funds may be invested inCD’s, money market funds, stocks, andTreasury bills from which the schoolsmay spend up to half the interest in¬come. $35 million to $40 million will beavailable from the existing developinginstitution’s aid program in each of thenext four years.A clear example of this bill’s benefitsis provided by its potential use byHouston’s Texas Southern University.While the University of Texas has anNew U of C theater groupBy Mindy GreensteinUniversity Theatre (UT) has an¬nounced the birth of what it hopes willbecome the campus’ own improvisa-tional troupe.Rather than an isolated theatregroup, the University Theatre Impro-visational Group (UTIG) has been ini¬tiated as part of a new campaign to re¬vive popular University Theatre oncampus headed, in part, by ProfessorFrank Kinahan and Director of StudentActivities Irene Conley.The UTIG, to be headed by UT Man¬aging Director Steve Schroer, will becomprised of approximately ten stu¬dents, to be chosen through auditionsheld in the coming week. The aim ofUTIG, according to Schroer, is tocreate a context for training burgeon¬ing actors on campus.30, 1983 The kind of training that UTIG hopesto provide will include learning how toconcoct one’s own characters andlearning how to respond to events on¬stage in a natural way. By providingparticipants in the group with carefullyplanned imagination exercises,Schroer hopes to provide them experi¬ence in acting as well as directing.“Getting actors to contribute,” saysSchroer, “is how the learning processworks.”Most of the training will be based onViola Spolin’s conception of theatregames as opposed to the method of act¬ing often involved in reading a writtenpart. Thus, participants will create, so¬lidifying their own characters.This group, which Schroer hopesmay branch into more groups in com¬ing years, is to last the entire year. The endowment of $1.5 billion, Texas South¬ern, which is predominantly black, hasonly $700,000. When the endowment in¬come provided by this bill becomesavailable, administrators at TSU re¬port that financial aid will be providedto the 1100 students who were turnedaway for inability to pay tuition, im¬provements would be made in the fac¬ulty, and outdated lab equipmentwould be replaced.President Reagan is expected to signthis educational reform bill into lawsometime next week.fall quarter will be devoted to imagina¬tion exercizes, the winter to learning toapproach material, and the spring toputting on a show, the culmination ofthe year’s effort.Schroer, who was in an improvisa-tional group in college and has directedand acted in several Court Studio andConcrete Gothic productions, says he isnot particularly interested in line-read¬ing or particular types. He wants in¬stead to create a family of siblings whoare creative, intelligent and able towork with other people. “What we’relooking for are people with self-confi¬dence and pride, not egotism,” saysSchroer.Tryouts, which will be followed up bycallbacks, will be held in the ReynoldsClub North Reading Lounge on Mon¬day and Tuesday, October 3 & 4 from6:00 to 10:00 PM. All interested stu¬dents are encouraged to attend the au¬dition.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 Lenses7WTiat 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 tense specialist9(or is he an eyeglass salesman?)2 Can I expect professional service and care9(or will I be handled by inept non-professional salespeople?)3 Are the quality of lenses the best available9(or are they oft-brands and seconds?)4 The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest priceWe at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above crite¬ria of CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY AVD PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALVES!SUPER-WET BAUSCH& LOMBFLEXIBLE SOFLENSo.vlv $29.00 B\ B\&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 hard oncontact lens failures• NEW SUPER SOFT HIGH OXYGEN TRANSFER ULTRATHIN - $43.75New super-soft highly oxygen transferable lenses used to correctthose patients who were previous soft lens failures• SUPER-WET TORIC CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM -'$100.00The same remarkable material as the super-wet flexible lenses but spe¬cifically designed to our exact specifications to correct for difficult as¬tigmatism• SOFT LENSES CORRECTING FOR ASTICMATISM (TORIC) - 8160.00If 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 m the morning and seeLimit 1 pair per patientProfessional fee additional (required)includes Lye Examination Training Wearing Instructions and Carrying Case)OUR PROMISE TO YOU:you aren t pleased with your lenses after 60 days cost of the lenses will be re¬funded All contact lens fitting done by our Contact Lens Specialists,Dr S C Fostiak and Dr John S SchusterWe can replace your tost or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!(if lenses are in stock)IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST'CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED1724 Sh«rmin Avt., Ev»n»ton. IL 6020!(ibov* County S«»t)864-4441 3566 N. Clark St., Chicago. IL 606J 4880-5400 Festival Dayat the ChapelSunday, October 2, 19839:00 A.M. Ecumenical Service of Holy CommunionBernard O. Brown, Dean of the Chapel, preaching11:00 A.M. University Religious ServiceBernard O. Brown, Dean of the Chapel, preaching12:15 P.M. Buffet LunchHosted by Rockefeller Chapel for the University community.On the East Lawn (Ida Noyes Third Floor Theater in case ofrain(. Musical entertainment provided.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel5850 S. Wood lawn Ave., Chicago, Ill. 60637THE UC HOTLINEis a University service staffed andoperated by students who providea listening ear and information.INTENSIVE TRAINING: 3rd Cr 4th weeksthis quarterINFORMATIONAL MEETING: Monday, October 07 p.m. Ido Noyes Theatre (3rd floor)PLEASE CALL: 753-4777 formore informationMORRY’S DELIIN THEUNIVERSITY BOOKSTOREHAPPY HOUR SPECIALS!From 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. DailyKOSHER STYLEHOTDOGSall the trimmings ITALIANSAUSAGEall the trimmingsonly JUMBOHOTPASTRAMISANDWICHonly“*39^ $-| 09 59MORRY’S DELIIN THE BOOKSTORE5750 S. EllisVisit our other MORRY’S locations:MORRY’S MORRY’S MORRY’S inon 55th EL LUGAR Hutchinson Commons5500 S. Cornell 1603 E. 55th St. 1131 E. 57th St.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30. 1983—11IABLEHYDEPARKL WELCOME BACK!!VISIT OUR NEW STOREYOUR PHOTO HEADQUARTERS"BRAND NAMES" FOR LESS!!G! 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HRS-M0N.-SAT..9 am - 6 pm12—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983 Chicago Counseling andPsychotherapy Center• Founded in 1945 by Carl Rogersannouncing our annualPRACTICUM AND TRAINING PROGRAMIN CLIENT-CENTERED PSYCHOTHERAPY• supervised clinical experience• seminars on client-centered and expedienttheory, works of Rogers, Gendlin, Rice• 9-month program begins mid-OctoberFor in formation and application material, call-6 84-/800-HILLEL STUDIESYIDDISH Monday, October 3, 5:30 p.m.Beginning and Advanced (will meettogether for 1st time)Teacher - Mrs. Pearl KahanMIDRASH — Tuesday, October 4, 8:00 p.m.BERESHIT RABBAH - Rabbinic Exegesisof Genesis - Hebrew TextTeacher - Rabbbi Daniel I. LeiferMAIMONIDES — Thursday, October 5, 7:30 p.m.LAWS OF REPENTANCE - Hebrewand English Text StudyTeacher - Dr. Zanvet KleinBEGINNING AND ADVANCED TALMUDTo Be Organized - Watch Maroon forannouncementsREGISTRATION FEE is a Hillel MembershipStudents $15.00Others $30.00CLASSES BEGIN - Week of October 2AT: HILLEL HOUSE, 5715 S.Woodlawn, 752-1127ccPCSeptember 30, 1983 • 16th YearTHE PURSE STRINGS OF EDUCATIONby Cassandra SmithiesWhat does funding for higher education and jobtraining have to do with military registration?Quite a bit ever since the summer of ‘82 when Con¬gress speedily approved the Solomon Amendment,which denies federal educational benefits to non¬registrants. As of October 1st, in concurrence withDepartment of Education regulations, all studentsaccepting federally funded financial aid, which in¬cludes Pell Grants, GSLs, SEGGs, NDSLs and the Col¬lege Work-Study Program, must submit a State¬ment of Registration Compliance to receive thataid. According to Chicago attorney Marian Neudel,that we have been required to submit such state¬ments before the October 1st implementation dateis “grossly illegal, an invasion of privacy andleaves the University of Chicago vulnerable to lawsuit.”The Solomon Amendment, introduced by GeraldSolomon (R-NY) as an amendment to the Depart¬ment of Defense Appropriations Bill, states in ar¬ticle 2 “In order to receive any grant, loan, or workassistance under title IV of the Higher Education Actof 1965...a person who is required...to present him¬self for and submit to registration....shall file withthe institution of higher education which the person >intends to attend, or is attending a statement of £(registration) compliance.” Furthermore, under sec- |tion 3, “the Secretary of Education, in agreement ®with the Director (of Selective Service), shall pre¬scribe methods for verifying such statements ofcompliance. The last paragraph, section 4, providesthat a student who claims that he has registeredand has been denied aid is entitled to an adminis¬trative hearing. The only purpose of such a hearingis to prove that the student has registered for theSelective Service.Other federal laws and state laws similar to theSolomon Amendment have also been passed. Onesuch law effects federal funding of programs suchas the Job Partnership Training Act (JPTA) whichreplaced CETA. In Wisconsin, another law (effectivein several counties, including Milwaukee and Ma¬dison) ties welfare payments to draft registra¬tion.In all instances of laws restricting federal fundson the basis of draft registration compliance, themethod of verification has been prescribed by thedepartment under whose jurisdiction the fundingfalls. In the case of the JPTA, the Department ofLabor chose to give the power to administer andregulate funds to states and to local agencies. TheDepartment of Education, on the other hand, choseto write regulations on the federal level that applynationally. So, while the Illinois Department ofLabor implements the Solomon Amendment in sucha way that only men convicted of failing to registerwill be affected, the Department of Education’s reg¬ulations pertain to all students accepting federalaid, regardless of sex or age. Regulations are sup¬posed to contain enough detail to implement verifi¬cation. But these rules affect a whole new class ofpeople; women, and men not of draft age, whowere not indicated in the original statute. This dis¬crepancy constitutes grounds for objection in and ofitself.On November 23, 1982 the Minnesota Public In¬terest Group (MPIRG) filed suit in federal districtcourt of Minneapolis against the Secretary of Edu¬cation and the Director of Selective Service. Thissuit addresses the Solomon Amendment itself, notthe Department of Education regulations, which §•were not written at that time. MPIRG won a perma-1nent injunction against implementation of the col- jlege aid restrictions, charging constitutional and f Privacy Act violations (see box). In addition, JudgePaul Magnuson issued a declaratory judgement,declaring the law unconstitutional. The Secretaryof Education and the Director of Selective Servicethen won a temporary stay of the injunction pend¬ing their appeal to the Supreme Court. The Depart¬ment of Education is now free to implement the So¬lomon Amendment with their regulations.Originally set for July 1st, the date of implementa¬tion has been postponed three times by the Depart¬ment of Education itself with no explanation. EachCross Planting Vigil, U. of C., April, 1969 time the implementation was postponed, the com¬pliance forms for college aid sent out by schoolsshould have been revoked and the students noti¬fied. Currently, the date of implementation is setfor October 1st.Meanwhile, many colleges and Universities, in¬cluding the U. of C., are implementing the law be¬fore it goes into effect in anticipation of the October1st implementation date and in an effort to cutbureaucratic corners. Though a Statement of Regis¬tration Compliance may possibly be legally re¬quired for funds allocated for the period after Oc¬tober 1st, it is not legal to hold up the process offederal financial aid distribution on that basis.According to Neudel, the Solomon Amendmenthas already succeeded in intimidating the majorityof the 700,000 non-registrants affected by it, eventhough it has not been legally put into effect. Suchintimidation has fallen in a discriminatory manneron those lower income men who need federal aid topursue their education and/or job training pro¬grams.If you have not already complied with the Solo¬mon Amendment for a serious moral or politicalreason, you should talk with your financial aid of¬ficer and consult the organizations listed under“Groups To Contact”. Your financial aid officer cansuggest nonfederal sources of financial aid. You canalso ask your church or synagogue to provide alter¬native funding for yourself or other members ofyour religious body taking a conscientious standagainst the amendment.Regardless of compliance, write a letter to theDean of the Office of College Aid, Dan Hall, urginghim to establish alternative funds for conscientiousobjectors denied federal financial aid as Yale Uni¬versity, Swarthmore College, and Haverford Col¬lege have. Also urge the Office of College Aid tojoin with the attorneys of the aforementionedschools and with the University of Minnesota in fil¬ing a brief as amicus curiae to the Supreme Court insupport of a permanent injunction against imple¬mentation of the Solomon Amendment.Groups To ContactFor counseling about noncompliance and draft resistance.New Patriots Alliance, John Rossen, 663-1664. weekdayafternoons or leave message.For establishing credibility as a conscientious objector,American Friends Service Committee, Draft Refusers Sup¬port Group, Myrna Richardson, 235-0603; weekdaysI0am-lpm.Midwest Committee on Military Counseling, 59 E. VanBuren St. rm.809 , 60605, 939-3349; Military counselingfor less-than-honorable discharges, Mon. 6:30. bring doc¬uments; counseling about registration and the draft,Tues.-Fri. 9am-2pm.Pax Christi Illinois, 5401 S. Cornell, 324-8000; weekdays9am-5pm.Anyone interested in forming a draft resisters group oncampus snouio leave a message tor Cassandra Smithiescare of the Grey City Journal.MPIRG’s Objections to the Solomon Amendment1. The law denies workers and students equal protec¬tion under the law by discriminating on the basis ofsex, age, and wealth. Only draft-age males are affect¬ed by the law. The law blatantly discriminates againstlower income men, and enforcement will have a dispro¬portionate impact on minority workers and students.2. The statute constitutes a Bills of Attainder, violatingArticle 1, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution. A citizenwould be determined guilty of a crime (failure to regis¬ter for the draft) and punished by a legislative actwithout being provided a court trial and other protec¬tions guaranteed criminal defendants.3. The law violates workers’ and students’ FifthAmendment rights against self-incrimination by re¬quiring them to disclose their draft registration status.Whether or not workers or students provide confirma¬tion letters, it is possible they will incriminate them¬selves directly or through silence, in an ensuing Inves tigation.4. The law violates the Privacy Act of 1974. Draft reg¬istration information is irrelevant to the proper distri¬bution of federal assistance to workers and students,and sharing of confidential information with the Selec¬tive Service violates an individual’s protection underthe act.5. The proposed regulations will establish even closerties between community and educational institutionsand the U.S. military. It is wholly inappropriate for col¬leges, community organizations, and the Departmentof Education and Labor to enforce the draft law.6. The regulations are administratively burdensomeand costly for the colleges, the Dept, of Education, pri¬vate industry councils, and the Dept, of Labor. Timeand money desperately needed for essential programsare now wasted on processing an additional and unnec¬essary qualification for federal assistance.SG ACTIVITIES presents.withThe Dave RobertsSwingtetTHEHOMECOMING DANCESaturday, Oct. 8IDA NOYES HALL9:00 p.m.-midnightS6.00 per personTICKETS at SAOREYNOLDS CLUB &xssexxxxxsexx%xx3sx3e%xxx3exx%xxxxxxx3ttaexsexxxx3exxxx!PLANT SALE!Greenery from $1 - $35on sale Oct. 3 - Oct. 5,10 a.m. -6 p.m. inReynolds Club North Lounge— an SAO service -CALVERT HOUSECATHOLIC STUDENT CENTERBIDSWELCOME TO THE UNCHURCHED- Those who never believed, but ore serious inquirers- Those who used to believe, but are not satisfied with unbelief- Those who believe, but are insecure about their faith- Those who waver between belief and unbelief- Those who are skepticalA SERIES OF TUESDAY EVENING SESSIONS ONTHE LIFE AND TEACHINGS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCHWILL BEGIN ONTUESDAY, OCTOBER 4th at 7:00 PMCALVERT HOUSE, 5735 S. UNIVERSITY260-23112—FRIDAY, SEP I EMBER 30, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALTHEATERPinteresque An evening of HaroldPinter one-acts directed by SteveSchroer and performed by UC stu¬dents. The plays include A SlightAche, Landscape and Night. Theseplays are all earlier works by Pinterand therefore are very concernedwith the restraints of theater, suchas time and place. But like all Pinterworks, they are funny and challeng¬ing. The company which is producingthese plays is new, whereas thedirector did a couple of plays twoyears ago which received mixed re¬views and the actors were seen lastyear in The Real Inspector Hound. Asalways please come and support stu¬dent theater on our campus. Fri andSat at 8. Reynolds Club Third FloorTheater. $2 students, $3 generalpublic. —SDHay Fever Written by Noel Coward,directed by Susan Dafor. This playtakes place in the eccentric BlissHousehold. Like all of Coward'swork, this is a very amusing Englishdrawing room comedy and if wellexecuted could be a joy to watch.Wed thru Sat bt 8, Sun at 2:30 and7:30. Court Theater 5535 S. Ellisave. 753-4472. $10-$13 with a $2student discount. —SDA Raisin in the Sun: Written by LorraineHansberry; directed by Tom Bullard.It tells the story of a strugglingblack middle class family. The playoriginally opened in Chicago 15years ago, before going on to N.Y.C.and fame and fortune. This meansthat even if the production is good,the play itself might be dated. Wedand Thurs at 7:30, Fri. and Sat. at 8and Sun at 2:30 and 8. GoodmanTheater 200 S. Columbus drive $13-$21. —SDHothouse Written by Harold Pinter;directed by Jeff Perry. Tues thru Friat 8, Sat at 6 and 9:30, Sun at 3 and7. Steppenwolf Theater, 2851 N.Halsted 472-4515. $11 50-$15.The Dresser Written by Ronald Har¬wood and directed by PaulineBrailsford. Thurs and Fri at 7:30, Satat 5:30 and 9, Sun at 2:30 and 7:30.Body Politic Theater 2261 N. Lincolnave. 348-7901. $9-$13.50 with anadditional student discount.In the Belly of the Beast: Letters fromPrison Adapted from a book by JackAbbott and directed by Rober Falls.Wed thru Fri at 8. Sat at 6 and 9:30and Sun at 3 and 7:30. WisdomBridge Theater 1559 W. Huron743-6442. $11 -$13 but student ac¬tivities has discount tickets for onenight.The Unnamed Adapted from The Hunt¬er of the Dark by H.P. Lovecroft anddirected by Michael Fosberg. Thursthru Sun at 8. Huron Theater 1608 N.Wells. 266-7055. $7, $9.THE FOREVER WAR by Joe Haldemanis the 30th ORGANIC THEATER COM¬PANY production directed by found¬er and producing director StuartGordon. The world premiere of thescience fiction drama runs from Oc¬tober 4 through November 13. Lowpriced previews are October 4-16.Curtain is at 8 pm Tues - Fri, 6 pmand 10 pm Sat, 3 pm and 8 pm onSunday. Admission ranges from$12-$14, with student, senior andgroup rates available. Info and Rescall 327-5588. ORGANIC THEATERCOMPANY 3319 N. Clark.FILMThe Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola,1972) Something about offers andacceptance. A family film. Sun., Oct.2 at 8:30 LSF $2 -PFThe Ladykillers (Alexander Macken-drick, 1955) American emigre Wil¬liam Rose. (The Maggie, Touch andGo) scripted this droll Ealing Studioscomedy about an outrageously im¬probable assortment of crooks (AlecGuinness, Peter Sellers, HerbertLorn, Cecil Parker, and Danny Green)who hole up as travelling musiciansin a fluttery old lady’s home (KatieJohnson’s) & try to include her intheir misdeeds, but who succeedonly in knocking themselves off —all without so much as a glint ofawareness by their hostess. The lastof the great Ealing comedies, The La¬dykillers is a superbly grotesqueexample of the studio's peculiarsense of balancing suspense, humor,and satire. Wed., Oct. 5 at 8:30 LSF$2 —PFThe Searchers (John Ford, 1956) A filmso universally praised as the defini¬tive American Western that furthercomment seems redundant. WithJohn Wayne, Natalie Wood, JeffreyHunter and Vera Miles. Thurs., Oct.6 at 8:30 LSF $2 -PF Mark Ray Hollman and Dawn Brennan in48 Hours (Walter Hill, 1983) EddieMurphy is a superstar, and that’smore than enough reason to see 48Hours. Murphy — who is used to amuch better degree than in his othersmash hit, Trading Places — is a con¬vict who is let out for a Godard-likeweekend of thrills, chills, and killsas he helps Nick Nolte track down apair of savage homicidal maniacs.While the interracial partnership isstraight out of 1-Spy, the film works,mostly due to Hill’s fine sense of theaction genre (he also did The War¬riors) and Murphy'* poise, style,and all-around dude cool. With An¬nette O'Toole, in a role that waslargely left on the cutting roomfloor. Fri, Sept 30 at 7, 9, and 11.DOC. $2.50. —IMThe Verdict (Sidney Lumet, 1983)Lumet may have bombed out on hisbleeding-heart epic Daniel, but TheVerdict holds in his tendencytowards the preachy and the bom¬bastic. Paul Newman plays a down-and-out attorney whose last chancefor moral salvation comes throughhis pursuit of a lawsuit against aneglegent hospital. While JamesMason as the evil-bad-guy lays it ona bit thick, The Verdict is one of thebest courtroom dramas to be seen ina long time. This may be due to thescript, which was written by DavidMamet, a former Chicagoan. Sat,Oct 1 at 7, 9, and 11. DOC. $2.50—JMCity of Women (Federico Fellini, 1980)In City of Women, Fellini turns hisgleefully absurdist eye towards twoimportant topics: first, the feministmovement; second, Fellini's view ofthe feminist movement. What re¬sults is a fascinating, and often self¬lacerating look at Fellini’s world ofwomen — or better still, his bizarrefantasy world of women. Throughthe eyes of long-time alter ego Mar¬cello Mastroiani, Fellini encountersfemale bikers, female terrorists, fe¬male cops, and just about everyvariation on the theme of women'sliberation imaginable. What hefinds is his own sexist nature, andhis ability to examine his own prob¬lematic sexism gives this film itspower and interest. Sun, Oct 2 at8:00. DOC $2. —JMOut of the Past (Jacques Tourneur,1947) This film is indisputably Tour¬neur’s masterpiece, a film whichmay be the greatest noir of all time,and Robert Mitchum cuts a prettysnappy figure, as well. Mitchumplays an ex-hoodlum whose pastcatches up to him in the form of hisex-boss, played by Kirk Douglas inthe performance of his career. Doug¬las, and his moll Jane Greer, soon in¬volve Mitchum in a menage-a-trois Pinteresquewhich leads towards deceit, ven¬geance, and murder. Of all the earlyRobert Mitchum films, Out of thePast, is the one which defined forev¬er his distinctive brand of righteousennui. One of the best films from theForties. Mon, Oct 3 at 8:00. DOC. $2.—JMAccident (Joseph Losey, 1967) Dirk Bo¬garde stars as an Oxford profwhose neatly ordered life comescrashing apart after an automobileaccident in front of his estate causeshim to lose control. The accident be¬comes blurred with other events inhis life, especially his affair with astudent, leading to a murky explo¬ration of the human psyche which ismore the product of screenwriterHarold Pinter (he also writes plays,as you probably know) than of direc¬tor Losey. Still, the Losey/Pinter/Bo¬garde collaboration gives equaltime to plot, mise-en-scene, and act¬ing, adding the parts up into whatcan only be called one of the most re¬freshingly adult films of the last twodecades. Tues, Oct 4 at 8:00. DOC.$2. —JMFellini: A Director's Notebook (FedericoFellini, 1969) In this hour documen¬tary, Fellini explores Fellini. A logi¬cal extension of his self-centered cin¬ema, Director’s Notebook gives agood insight into the master atwork, play, and everything else.Wed, Oct 5 at 8:00. DOC. $2. —JMVariety Lights (Federico Fellini and Al¬berto Lattuada. 1950) On the secondhalf of a double bill with Director'sNotebook, DOC is presenting an ear¬lier Fellini, a collaboration from theFifties which shows the influence ofItalian neo-realism. Fellini and Alt-tuada explore the world of a travel¬ing vaudeville show, capturing theiractions in a pseudo-documentarystyle, but intimating the theme ofworld-as-carnival that would be soimportant in all of Fellini’s ownfilms, even up to the present dayWed, Oct 5 at 9:00. DOC. $2. —JMHard Times (Walter Hill, 1975) WalterHill, the king of large-scale malebonding (48 Hours, The Warriors,Southern Comfort) gives here whatmight be called his most tender film— even though it’s about street lifein depression-era New Orleans.Charles Bronson gives a low-keyperformance as a streetfighter whogets involved with the sharp-dressed James Coburn. Hard Timeshas the most feeling for detail andhistory of any Hill film, and doesn'tsacrifice genuine feelings for gutemotional responses. All in all. an in¬teresting film. It's still about box¬ing, however so be forewarned.Thurs, Oct 6 at 8:00. DOC. $2 —JMFor film buffs who speak a little Ger¬man, the Film Center and the Ger¬man Cultural Center presents aseries of operetta films. A screeningof the 1933 operetta VIKTOR UNDVIKTORIA which was the basis forBlake Edward's 1982 film, Victor,Victoria, directed by ReinholdSchuenzel, starts the series on Oct 2.All films are in German with out sub¬titles. For more call 329-0915.Gread dissects the avarice of modem men and proves that extreme actiontears apart the social bonds that thefamily is meant to foster. This film isa story of a dentist whose wife in¬herits some money. He eventuallykills her for it and is pursued by herformer lover who seeks the reward.Long considered one of the bestfilms ever made. Wed Oct 5 7:30pmInternational House.Small Change is a series of vignettesabout children living in Thiers, asmall town in central France. Therethe Children lead charmed lives andtheir humor is captured on film withall the sponteneity of children atplay. Thur Oct 6 at 7:15pm and9:30pm International HouseTo Have and Have Not (Howard Hawks1944) Francois Truffaut reports thatthis film had its genesis in a conver¬sation between Hawks and ErnestHemingway, in which the directorclaimed he could make a movie fromthe writer’s worst story. Heming¬way seems to have agreed withHawks about the story, but one nev¬ertheless expects a good deal from ascript in which two Nobel Prize-win¬ning authors had a hand (WilliamFaulkner was co-author of thescreenplay, with help from JulesFurthman). The results are not at alldisappointing. It’s a marvelously en¬tertaining film, with romance andWWII intrigue aplenty. It belongs, ofcourse, to Humphrey Bogart andLauren Bacall, and the chemistry be¬tween them goes much deeper thananything even the best writers anddirectors could elicit. Bogie, a hard¬bitten fisherman in Martinique, is astough as ever, but he more thanmeets his match in Bacall, appearinghere at age 19 in her film debut. Onewriter said that her “husky, under¬slung voice, which is ideal for the do¬uble intendre, makes even her simp¬les remarks should like junglemating cries." Indeed, from her inso¬lent opening “Anybody got amatch?”, she is electrifyingly sen¬sual. With Walter Brennan, andAndy Williams singing as Bacallmouths the words to several HoagyCarmichael songs. 8 pm LSF. Satur¬day, —SWARTJohn Knight’s MUSEOTYPES opens thisyears series at the Renaissance Soci¬ety. According to the press release“The work of John Knight belongswith the recent tradition of artisticactivity established by such artistsas Claes Oldenberg, Dan Flavin, andSol Lewitt in the 1960 s and contin¬ued into the 1970's and 1980's bysuch artists as Michael Asher, DanielBuren, Dan Graham, and LawrenceWeiner." As always this is a showand an opening that anybody aspir¬ing to stay up to date with contem¬porary art should definitely seeOpens Sun Oct. 2 from 5 to 7. Theshow runs from 10/2—11/19.Fans News works by a host of recog¬nized locals; curated by Ellen Lanyonfor the Art Center's benefit. OpensSun Oct. 2, 4-7, with a silent auction; $25. Exhibit thru Nov. 6: Tue-Sat.11-5. 324-5520. Free.New Image/Pattern and Decorationfrom the Morton G. Neumann FamilyCollection. Thirty-some paintings.Opens Wed Oct 5, 5-7 at the SmartGallery, 5550 Greenwood. Thru Dec4: Tue-Sat, 10-4; Sun, 12-4.753-2123. Free.Recent Acquisitions, 1982-83 Small, di¬verse showing of older and contem¬porary black and white and colorphotos. Of the more recent, two byJohn Pfahl from his “Picture WindowSeries” provide the show’s mostpleasing, accessible images throughaccomplished use of painterly colorand composition. They are placednear the start for good reason:others, in black and white, from thiscentury, which range from thestraight to the pictorial (Friedlanderand Nixon to Imogen Cunningham),lead into the usual 19th Centurytouchstones. These were documenta¬ry; now they're art, not to mention adull and fitting conclusion to a weakshow. Closes Wed oct 5 at the Art In¬stitute, 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. —DMPossible Worlds Six locals Closes SunOct 2 at 440 N Wells, 8th floor.Carpet Stain Performance and music bya young local crew with a knack forpresenting the outrageous and in¬comprehensible. Could be fun. To¬night, 8-? at Randolph Street Gal¬lery, 756 N Milwaukee 666-7737.$3. $2 students. Paintings and otherless readily classifiable objects thruOct 15: Tue-Sat, 11-5; free.MUSICThe Chicago Camerata Young Compos¬ers Concert with soprano soloistDiane Ragains. Featuring two worldpremieres, James Jacobsen's Etch¬ings and Melinda Wagner's Intarsia,as well as Schoenberg's Pierrot Lun-aire. Conducted by Barbara Schu¬bert Goodspeed Recital Hall Sun Oct2 at 8. FreeNoontime Concert Series The Music De¬partment’s series of Thursday con¬certs will open with Vaclav Nelhy-bel's “Suite for Trumpet and Piano"played by Tom Shields and Tom Bar¬rett; Elizabeth Rosenblatt, flute,and Jay Rosenblatt, piano, perform¬ing “Sonata in C Major,” opus 19, no1 by J.C.Bach; and Edith Lowe Aunerplaying a piano work by Chopin.Goodspeed Recital Hall Thur Oct 6 at12:15The Pointer Sisters Ruth, June andAnita have a new album. Break Out;and they will be performing songsfrom this and earlier albums at theRosemont Horizon on Sat Oct 1Phone Scott Baio Dial 1-900-210-BAIO(50« per call) and hear an excerptfrom Scott's new album, The BoysAre out Tonight; you’ll also get atoll-free number to call for orderingthe record Don’t miss the chance tospeak to the teen star of "HappyDays"!Grey City Journal 9/30/83Staff: Steven Diamond, Pat Finegan, Jae-Ha Kim, Lorraine Kenny, Ma¬deline Levin, Jeffrey Makos, Nadine McGann, David Miller, JohnProbes, Cassandra Smithies, Ken WissokerProduction: Nadine McGann, David MillerAssociate Editors: Abigail Asher, Stephanie BaconEditors: Jesse Halvorsen, Brian MulliganTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—3absorbtipytoem v .MERRYPOP STAR PARADEby J. TaylorDoubles scotches at Bennigan’s. Jayquips: “First showing in Chicago — thatmakes us important, right? Avantgarde?" Yup.Japanese director Oshima’s MerryChristmas, Mr. Lawrence was released inBritain one month ago and in Japan amonth before that. Having just returnedfrom London, f am bristling with Bowiemedia hype, but will see the film tor thefirst time at tonight’s sneak preview. It isabout life in a Japanese POW camp duringthe second World War.Lights dim, score begins and my headrings with alcohol and the thoughts ofothers: “movie about cultures ..firstserious Japanese cinema in years...movieabout war...Bowie’s best acting todate...movie about peace...the Japanesepop star only agreed to act so he couldwrite the music...movie about relation¬ships...See these eyes so green?"Movies about serious issues made inJapan do not usually succeed with Japa¬nese audiences. Industry barons nurturethe Japanese public on a steady diet ofsure things: American blockbusters andAcademy Award winners. Japanese fanta¬sies and war films.Oshima is regarded in Japan as a seriousfilmmaker whose efforts are rarelyrewarded at the box office. In his newOshima employs a m "**■.*« trend:Uaifilmmaker whose «..Jmrewarded at the box office. In ntsfilm, Oshima employs a media master¬stroke to reverse this trend: he has castpop stars in the two starring roles. DavidBowie is the brooding Major Jack Cel tiersof the British army; Captain Yonoi, hisEastern counterpart, is played by Japa¬nese rock'n'roll superstar Ryuichi Sakamo¬to ■—Wittes in Oshima’s POW-*icnracenese rock’n’roll supe.to.Our first five minutes in Oshima’s POWcamp teach us that surrender is disgrace,suicide is privilege and life after personalfailure is worse than death. Harikari is of-a to those who fail as the only honoro who refuse to <~ -H2diHty>suicide is privilege a.«v Ifailure is worse than death. Harikan 10fered to those who fail as the only honor¬able retribution: those who refuse to com¬mit harikari out of fear or weakness areexecuted and regarded as sub-human. Thesavagery of Imperial Japanese values isintended to shock Westerners and Eas¬terners alike, and it works.As the grim and youthful Captam Yonoi,Sakamoto transfixes viewers with hispower and grace. It’s tough to look awayfrom him, even when Bowie makes his be¬lated entrance. Yonoi sees himself as amodern-day samurai, and is driven by thesecret shame of having been on leavewhen the officers of his first military divi¬sion were slaughtered by the enemy.Bowie s Celliers is harder to pin down,but clearly has something to hide as well.Yonoi develops a fascination with Celliers,which later becomes more of an obsession^His game is to expose Celliers, and there¬fore all Westerners, for the weaklingsthey surely must be. and Yonoi plays itruthlessly, arranging ruses, betrayals andordeals designed to "break’’ the Britishmajor. . 1It must be said that Sakamoto is a muchbetter actor than Bowie. Yonoi is infinitelymore appealing to Western audiences thanCelliers. despite his barbarism, because ofthe Intensity Sakamoto brings to the char¬acter. The violence of Yonoi's sout is on ahair-trigger; the audience shares his crisiswhen he realizes he is, in fact, falling inlove with Celliers. In the end he is de¬stroyed by a kiss.But Bowie's character rarely matters tous. The hidden guilt of his past revolvesaround failure to defend his youngerbrother during a boarding school hazing.this sequence is contrived at best. Oshi¬ma’s attempt lo link Yonoi and Celliers-|| through their common guilt falls flat be¬cause of weak flashback sequences andBowie's self-con8c»ous acting. Wt'. BOWIE SCHMOWlEby M. McLoughlin"Bowie is brilliant." Enough. WeEsquire theatre.Blue faces laugh down row to aisiWrestle for the jumbo popcorn.Four previews*“Bowie IS brilliant.” Blunt.No smoking in the theatre.WhiliirrrrrrrRRRRRRRR!The dolby is deafening as Bowitrisesover strains of Oriental melody.We have come to see, or rather tcfrom the 25 foot screen, the blond cof his face;We sit and wait.Earlier in the summer we stoodon the backs of Rosemont chairs to iglimpse of this Creature. We caught taction between the shoulders of the rfront of us:Bowie strutting to “Let’s Dance.”Bowie strumming to "Space Oddity."Bowie pushing us as close to a relitexperience as we’ve ever had at aconcert. The dancing was precarious orof the chairs, the heat excruciating.Today at the Esquire we’re loungincair conditioned comfort— our legs sprover the arm rests in front of us. We wto see his skewed eyes up close now.Perhaps this anticipation has distractus from Oshima’s opening shots which haeffectually placed us in a WWII Japane;prison camp. We are surprised to lea>that Mr. Lawrence, the sympathetic, Jap*nese speaking British officer is not playeby Bowie, but by Tom Conti. Lawrence cairies on a Hogan’s Heroes relationship wit!one of the guards, Sgt. Hara. However,Hara has a strong streak of sadism, a topicwhich seems to lend consistency to themovie.The drama opens with Hara commandingMaj. Lawrence to witness the forced hari-kari of a guard who has been accused ofhomosexual rape. Hara tries to get rapistand victim to reenact the crime forLawrence’s benefit. Not only does thisscene revolt us, but we are annoyed atOshima for presenting harikari as somerevetation we westerners never heard of(come on, we all saw Shogun!),I pick popcorn from my teeth and waitfor Bowie.Finally, enter the man who fell to earth(this time as royal paratrooper, Jack Cel¬liers, a “soldier's soldier," literallydressed to kill). Bowie’s "seen-it-all," off¬hand style of speaking is enchanting...fora few minutes. Then we later learn thatthis hardened soldier’s most traumaticemotional experience was letting hisyounger brother get beaten at boardingschool. Ridiculous!Another problem is Capt. Yanoi's inter¬est (homosexual?) In Celliers. When this in¬terest turns obsessive the tension of themovie picks up only to lead us to a deadend. Apparently Oshima thinks that cheekbones and glares (Yanoi’s looks rivalBowie’s) can carry a storyline wherewords cannot. Therefore, the final confron¬tation between Yanoi and Celliers Is flat.The audience has been lost long before.Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (the titleie virtually irrelevant) leaves Bowie’s act¬ing ability untested la Oavkl Bowie bri»-" liant? We never find out.4—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALCHANGE OF DAYAND PLACE:ISRAELI FOLK DANCINGNOW MEETING ONTUESDAYS8 p.m.-10 p.m.in3rd Floor TheatreIDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 59th— $1.00 Donation — A SMALL PRESS FAIROctober I, 198310 a.m. - 4 p.m.Chicago Public LibraryCultural CenterEditors,authors, publishers fromnearly 50 presses seldomfound in commercial bookstores —i, poetry, non-fiction magazinesand books.FREE and open to the public!Also — films, exhibits, entertainmentFor more information, call 269-3028.Preston Bradley Hall, Chicago Public Library Cultural Center, 78 E.Washington St.Folk Singing by Fred Holstein.WRITE ON, CHICAGO A FESTIVAL Of THE LITERARY ARTS ho« iwti scheduled •v.rydoy in October Presented by the Chicago Public Library and the lllmots Humanities Coucil Smoll Press fairco-sponsored by Friends of American WritersTHE BRUNCH IS BACKBagelsLoxCream CheeseOrange JuiceCoffee Only $1.75per SandwichSunday TribuneNew York TimesSUNDAYS AT 11:00a.m.Hillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn[ ' ' - ' _ ’s’' ' r ! X ' v y - , , ' " r'“" \ , \ \ I 1 ' \ ':’'V> n Vf v20 P C,Vr' I SET of STONEWARE T —I ■-HAND LOOMED,00% COTTONBEDSPREADS'tor C O O$17,s lill(^Swing ArmglmmmsMMIs a mp' 'i'.'V'r ,''D\'vtv;'• x'o/.,c»''r"KZ>1' -*' /r / / [//,; IJ, V- /'v/. - • v » I- 1' 1/A // m\\vjy 'Z/ w'-x S f ^ ^1 \ \V/ V/» "iW7-C' o i\ / x / isi'. : r' -A\ iC*I/-1 * " M1 . k, '//A[-/• r»,\\vlM CORKBOARDSv6W;r". ALL ON “ ' ''-'4SALE - .1 ‘Ur9 „?Select i01*Steffiwav1•fX-'c:;SPLIt' BAMBOOXXAiiii ixft!«, >A P« » A/xAX'XM ATCHSTIC K BAMBOO / S^v,N 3FT «4FT WIDTHS 'v >VX v3c^/ !..'i':--Vt'^V : '' • ■ ' ' ■> 1 ■ •» ' i ■ 1 - - '■ i. i ' ' ~ ' 1 ' 1 ~-^-1EXPRESSV Quality isn't cheap, but it doesn't have to expensive.Open doily Monday thru Saturday 10a.m. - 6pmCooley’s Cornet 5Til';?hS,^™inho,Pe,cour, 363-4477THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—5SAVE '2000 OR MOREON A KAYPROII.Special films for yourspecial shots!The newfamily of 35 mmKODACOLORVR FilmsKODACOLOR VR 1000 Film• The most light-sensitiveKodacolor film everISO 1000• Capture that natural-lightteeling indoors, without aHashCF135-12 CF135-24KODACOLOR VR 400 Film• Lets you select last shutterspeeds to stop action in day¬light or to capture manyexisting-light situations• Choose smaller apertures toextend depth ot fieldISO 400CM135-12 CM135-24 CM135-36The University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic Department2nd Floor962-7558Visa and Master Charge accepted PRODUCTS BYKodakv—— /KODACOLOR VR 200 Film• Gives you the flexibility toselect a slightly highershutter speed to stop actionor smaller lens aperture toincrease depth of field overa wide range of general-lighting conditions ISO 200CL135-12 CL135-24 CL135-36KODACOLOR VR 100 Film• The sharpest Kodacolor filmever is ideal for generalpicture-taking situationswhere maximum imagesharpness and color qualityare desired ISO 100CP135-12 OP135-24 CP 135-34 For $1595, Kaypro gives you a business computeras complete as machines costing $2000 to $3000 more.The Kaypro II comes complete with64K RAM, Z'80 microprocessor• 9" monitor ♦ Dual disk drives (400Kcapacity) ♦ Interfaces for a printer* and communications ♦ Keyboardand numeric keypad ♦ CP/M,with complete complement ofbusiness applications software. Come in today for acomplete Kaypro II demonstration.Tlie Complete Business Cinriputer.VALUE ADDED SYSTEMSDEL PRADO MEZZANINE1701 E. 53rd St. Phone: 667-4440With a cleaning and check-upsome things can be preventedJohn P. Panzica, D.D.S.Margie L. Mannering, D.D.S.Hyde Park Bank Building1525 E. 53rd St. • 643-9639STUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE!SATURDAY AND EVENING APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE!TAI CHI CHUANtaught byMaster Kuo-Chung WuDemonstration & First MeetingSUNDAY OCT. 2 3-5 p.m.3rd Floor Ida Noyes Hallcontact: Richard Marr - 248-0703eveningsEd Petten - 363-5830 Sticks & StuffCOLLECTIBLES • ANTIQUES • USED FURNITURE •CLOCKS • LAMPS • DOLLS • JEWELRY • STAINED GLASSMINIATURE LAMPS • STAINED GLASS BUSINESS CARD HOLDERSHours:1 749 E. 55th St. Tues-Fri Noon - 7 pm 667-4610Sat & Sun 10 am - 5 pm CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 1 1 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E, 63rd MU 4-1062IMAR00N -jI 9629SSSICAN YOU BUY GOOD TASTE?Yes! 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And remember toeat your peanut butter and jelly sand¬wiches over the sink. ovP.S'CM OO ''T3.=O ^00 p -accn aT a>. c °P(/>~C aiT3 r-4 >CC\j CDa>r^ -c(/) OY O— c ^to oEDO .4) Ca> ~o --5 c cz. to =O ^ Eo 1a. ba o■oc2k.3O(0*oo £ oTO O£ EgO o Ecr SI 2©j-D SQJ C 1- JC4)00 u: <S) </> X <x>>o<S £ HtoE</)JCgwi/) (V>sCJc t/JJZ V.SIi/T :4) a»>- *? tS)(V0)£3oH—$o &&&&&act a a a(D cu a> QJ <DN NN N MCO CO CO CO CO•0-0-00)0)4cr a: cnj* lv Id Ivo -t? ■£? td£ JS'rz’r: '.co o o o oid ID o O CO^ CO CO COi A t A i A i A / rvv f \Tj v 7 v/7 vTV)■e £•— <Dcn —+2 <y TO V) TO•I o -9 > XCO 3 01 _ „to C 2=TO O OCD CO Oi DOS EQUIS[JHE UNCOMMONIMPORTj*t?vS- <6—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALJae-HaKimChip and Tony Kinman"WE'RE NOT SPECIAL PEOPLE"by Jae-Ha KimRank & File don’t look like acountry band, but they are. Led bythe Kinman Brothers, Chip (25) andTony (26), Rank & File is the hottestthing to come out of Texas since theyellow rose. Originally, Chip andTony were founding members of aSan Francisco based punk band calledthe Dils. Although that was a goodbasis for gaining experience, theyfelt stifled by the restraints of punk.So they packed up and left Californiafor Austin, Texas. They met up withSlim Jim Evans (drums) and AlejandroEscovedo (guitar) and formed Rank &File.Gigs were hard to come by backthen. The locals didn’t know what tomake of them — they were toocountry for the rock clubs, and toorock for the c & w clubs.Now, however. Chip says that theyplay as much as they want to, andthat they love playing live. It’s evi¬dent in their shows. Loud and raw,they play with all the energy of ahungry punk band. Besides playingexcellent cuts like “Amanda Ruth’’and “Coyote” from their Slash debutIp Sundown, they play covers of RoyAcuff, Johnny Cash, and a speedierversion of George Jones’ “WhiteLightening”. Less concerned withclothing and image than with theirmusic, Rank & File are the antithesisof the current crop of British stars in¬filtrating the U.S.I caught up with Chip and Tony atFitzgerald’s, a club in Berwyn, IL.They were breaking in a new gui¬tarist, Junior Brown, and were eagerto talk about their music. Blond andboyish, Chip is the physical oppositeof the 6’4”, intense looking Tony. Butboth were adamant about one thing—• their music!Jae: What do you think about the new bands that are coming out like DuranDuran and Culture Club?Chip: I hate them! I think they’re abunch of nonsense. Their music is sosoulless...J: But then there’s U2. They’re rela¬tively new, but they write about po¬litical events...C: U2 are better than most of thebands in the “new breed”, but I don’tparticularly get into them either.J: Who do you like?C: Well, I like Merle Haggard's band,the Strangers. I like the Blasters, andin my Dils days, I really liked the Ra-mones a lot. I still like them...J: How ’bout you, Tony?Tony: I listen to reggae, and country,of course. I also like that last one byPaul McCartney (Tug of War). I knowit’s kind of uncool to admit that nowa¬days.J: What do you think about these newbands that are cropping up now?T: Well, I don’t hate them. I just don’treally listen to them.J: Did you and Chip always play inbands together?T: No, Chip started this band. I wastrying to go to college.J: What college?T: Berkeley.J: Berkeley? You must be prettysmart.T: I got by. (smiles shyly)J: How long have you been playingthe bass?T: Oh, I’ve been playing on and off forseveral years now.J: How ’bout you, Chip? How longhave you been playing the guitar?C: I’ve been playing since I was 16.J: Did you always want to be in aband, or did you have more tradition¬al ideas as a child?C: Oh, I had more conventional ideas,you know. I thought about becoming adoctor, or a lawyer...or an Indian chief!J: Hence the western video, huh? Yourvideo for your namesake song, “Rank& File”, is quite clever. I like it — it’slike a short Western movie.C: Yah, we wanted to keep it basic,like our music. It took 4 days to shoot,and we filmed it in L.A. We didn’twant to clutter it up with models andthings like that.J: My favorite part is when Tonykicks over the cactus at the end of thesong.C: We didn’t want to do that, but theymade us. It was only a paper cactus,by the way. Do you remember thatstory from a couple of years agowhere that man shot a cactus?J: Uh, yes...C: Well, it fell down on him and killedhim. Anyhow, so it’s illegal to dothings like that now.J: People have been having a hardtime trying to classify your music.Some say you’re a rock band, whileothers say you’re a countryband...and some even go so far as tocall you “new wave country”.C: Oh, well I don’t apply that term tous. That indicates that you have aspecialized audience, but we’re notlike that. We get all kinds of peopleat our shows.J: So what would you call yourmusic?C: We're a country, or a rock and rollband...No new wave connotations!J: But you know, part of the classifica¬tion problem lies in the fact that youguys don’t look country. Even earlierthis year, you guys wore cowboy hatsand fringe suede jackets, but now...C: No, we’re going Hawaiian now(laughs). (By the way. Chip is wearinga sleeveless, light green Hawaiianshirt, blue/green jeans, and black Be-atle boots. Tony looks a bit morecountryish in his brown trousers, white t—shirt and blue denim vest,but either of the brothers could easilypass as a member of a new waveband). Anyways, it's the music thatcounts, not the look. So I think how wedress isn’t that important...althoughthis is my best shirt (laughs).J: What happened to Alejandro (Esco¬vedo)? He was a founding member ofthe band...C: Well, we had different ideas as mu¬sicians. He decided to leave.J: So Junior Brown’s only been in theband for a little while?C: Three weeks, so you’re seeing oneof our first shows with him.T: He’s a fast learner, so he picked upour songs really quickly.J: I understand that the Oak RidgeBoys turned down your offer to openfor them.T: Yah, they said that they reallyliked our music, but that we were toocountry for them. That was prettyweird.J: Where will you be recording yournext Ip — in L.A. or Austin?T: We'll record it this November inL.A. There're more facilities overthere. There aren't that many inTexas. There's one good one whereWillie Nelson records, but if we camein and played our music, they’d besurprised (laughs).J: You guys are pretty easy goingwhen it comes to intermingling withthe audience. I’ve never been to aconcert before where the bandmembers go into he audience be¬tween sets and chat with the folks.C: We don’ get into that “backstagementality”. We re not special peoplejust 'cause we’re in a band. You prob¬ably do things that are just as impor¬tant as what we do, but in a differentform. Besides, there’s no big dealabout being backstage...I don’t likestaying there. It’s boring!THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—7\KIMBARKSPECIALSSale dates: 9/30 - 10/6LIQUORCAFE COLUMBIACOFFEE LIQUEUR750 ml S499SMIRNOFFVODKA750 ml • 80 proof $409BACARDI RUMLight or dark750 ml $499MARTELL C -3-STAR COGNAC ^750 ml « 12"PRINCE HUBERTde POLIGNAC COGNACv.s.o.p. fine c-* nooCHAMPAGNE V | W750 ml M. MmJIM BEAMBOURBON750 ml $439SASHA GIN1.75 litre $*T4912 CLAN SCOTCH1.75 litre $099TANQUERAY GIN750 ml $799WINESRUTHERFORDSVINTNERS (CA)JOHANNESBURGRIESLINfe750 ml $099DOPIF WHITE(ALSACE)750 ml $099ANSELME SOAVE(ITALY)750 ml S *>993/s10HARVEYSBRISTOLCREAM (SPAIN)750 ml $fi99GANCIA ASTISPUMANTI750 ml $699GALLO WINES 3/1.5 litre $£88CARLO ROSSIWINES3.0 litre $099BEERSTROH’S BEER6-12 02. cans $009(warm only)AD SPECIAL!Bring in this ad andyou can purchaseMARINGER LIEBFRAUMILCH(GERMANY) 750 mlFor 99 reg.price$£99WINE AND CHEESE TASTINGEVERY FRIDAY & SATURDAYKIMBARK LIQUORS& WINE SHOPPE1214 E. 53rd. St.In Kimbark PlazaPhone: 493-3355Sun.-Noon-MidnightHours: Mon.-Thurs. 8am * lamFri. & Sat. 8am - 2amV S EARN BETTER GRADESENJOY MORE FREE TIMECall 565-4040CLASSES ARE NOW FORMINGEvelyn Wood Reading Dynamics A THAI 55*1I \ RESTAURANT/¥ VJlWE SERVETHE BEST THAI FOODIN TOWNOpen 1L noon-10 p.m.7 DAYS A WEEK1607 E. 55th St.363-7119There’s more to a great “LOOK” than a great hairstyle. You alsoneed beautiful skin and the right makeup. Now the “Total Look” expertsmake it so that you can’t afford NOT to look Great!THETOTALLOOKWith any regularly priced DesignerPerm you receive a ProfessionalSKIN CARE KIT...Absolutely FREE!In addition you canalso purchase thisUnique cosmeticTRAVELKITONLY at the a $50.00valueONLY $24.95hair performersyy ■|1621 E. 55th St. 241-7778PEN 7 DAYS8—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL'•7** y -&$r 'S,... f; * ' on target; a <Mever, complex; and coherentsuspense film— maybe a little too infa¬tuated with ail those flashing lights, butmat’s easily forgiven.Suddenly, however, the movie takes asharp turn for the metaphysical. This isn’tnecessarily a bad thing if done properly,but at this point, Brainstorm loses its senseof direction. By accident, a recording of awoman’s death is made, Walken is con¬vinced that playing the tape will reveal ailthe answers to life, the universe, and ev¬erything. Of course, his bosses have otherideas, and Walken is forced to go to ex-by Michael Kotze able from the actual experience; it taps di-Douglas Trumbull has this thing about rectly into the sensory centers of thetechnology. In 2001: A Space Odyssey, he brain. Think tank chief Cliff Robertsoncreated for Stanley Kubrick a cold, sterile, wants to put it on the market, governmentyet seductively beautiful world of ma- bad guys want to do secret and sinisterchine-like men and man-like machines. In things with it, while Walken and Fletcherhis first directorial effort. Silent Running, aren’t sure just what to do with it. Thetechnology wreaks destruction on earth, stage is set for a great, paranoid, techno-only to become its savior. In his newest conspiracy thriller.film, Brainstorm, Trumbull takes his para- So far so good — it’s a cross between Vi-noid love affair with technology further deodrome and Altered States, presentedthan ever before. in Trumbull’s crystal-clear, hyper-literalBrainstorm is the story of some scary narrative style, avoiding the story-line in-and seductive new technology cooked up consistencies that mar those films. The twoare impersonated convinc-with a winningly boyish,tank; it’s a machine that records brain- cocky charm, Fletcher with a pleasingwaves, enabling them to be played back blend of toughness and vulnerability. Thisat the touch of a button Thfr tmahot of ait being an Eighties-style we-have-met-the-enemy-and-be -is-us thriller, all the villainsare well educated, have good mannersand stylish haircuts, and sport preppyfashions— with Robertson looking verycome program material for the machine, smart in his Ralph Lauren Polo shirts andwhose playback is virtually indistinguish- beltless chinos. So far, Brainstorm is right::.r Vliiilfl%il •■■■-mm musical performances, even sex can be-■-/ /r- treme measures to learn the secret of thetape. It’s an intriguing idea, but it doesn’tseem to work in the context of the film’sheavy techno-orientation. You don’t use acomputer to count the angels on the headof a pin.Perhaps the most bailhooed aspect ofBrainstorm is the presence of NatalieWood, who died in a boating accident lastyear. This was her last film, and rumor hasthat large segments of her part werenever filmed, forcing the filmmakers to se¬verely alter the plot; apparently therewas to have been some kind of psychedelichigh-tech Liebestod at the end of Brain¬storm that never materializes in the fin¬ished movie. It seems likely that some¬thing is missing, as Wood is largely wastedIn the role of Walken’s estranged wife. Buteven though Brainstorm is probably notthe film it could have been, it remains ahighly enjoyable piece of hokum, an imagi¬native and entertaining fantasy that maytry to go a bit too far, but can’t be blamedfor trying. " *■ ’Dear Reader,The Grey City Journal accepts and encourages contributions concerningthe visual arts, literature, music, politics, etc. We also publish fiction andpoetry. Each week there is aBRUNCHfor those people contributing to the paper. Feel free to come with ideasfor reviews, feature articles and graphics. Also feel free to just come andlisten (and drink coffee). Brunch will be held onSUNDAY OCTOBER 2NOONAT 5617 DREXEL No. 2If you can’t make it to brunch and would like to get involved, stop in andtalk to us in Ida Noyes Hall, Room 303, during the week.Love,The EditorsTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL-FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1983-9THE AESTHETICS OF ANGSTby Shawn S. MageeIn the one hundred years since FranzKafka's birth, the term “Kafkaesque” —an overwhelming sense of emotional andintellectual inefficacy, presumed yet inex¬plicable guilt, near constant Angsf — hasbecome an intregal part of our modern vo¬cabulary. For many, the term and its con¬notations are familiar, but the actual workof Franz Kafka, born in 1883 and virtuallyunknown at the time of his death forty-oneyears later, remains less so. Thus the pub¬lication of an English language centennialedition Franz Kafka: The CompleteStories, edited by Nahum N. Glatzer with aforeward by John Updike, is a welcomeevent.The volume, which contains all the ex¬tant shorter fiction (excluding The Stoker,originally published in 1913 as a separatework, but later incorporated by Kafka asthe initial chapter into his unfinishednovel, Amerika) is the most inclusive col¬lection of Kafka stories to date. Includedare not only those works published byKafka during his lifetime (of which therewere, surprisingly, relatively few) butalso those spared incineration — as Kafkahimself had instructed — by Max Brod, hisfriend and literary executor.It is in this shorter, more intense fiction— as opposed to the longer and more di¬gressive novels — that the reader be¬comes most actuely aware of the myraid ofconflicts with which Franz Kafka dealt inhis work. Nowhere are these conflicts moreevident than in the story The Judgement.Written in 1912 in a few short hours dur¬ing the night of September 22/23 (Kafkaworked in the legal department of theWorker’s Accident Insurance Institute byday, and thus was forced to confine his‘‘scribbling” — as he referred to it — tolate at night) The Judgement, although em-compassing only a few pages, can be seenas a showcase, not only of virtually all ofKafka’s neuroses, but also of the succinctlybrilliant style which characterizes much ofthe shorter fiction.The story opens as Georg Bendemann, asuccessful young businessman, is finishinga letter to an old childhood friend now liv¬ing abroad, in which he announces, aftermuch inner debate, his recent engagement.After finishing the letter, George brings itto his father, seeking confirmation of howbest to break the news to his friend. ToGeorg's bewilderment, he finds his fatherfirst questioning the actual existence ofthis friend, and then, a few moments later,accusing George of betraying the sacredfriendship of this very same man, a manwhom Georg’s father then calls “a sonafter my own heart.” The father alsolaunches a jeremiad about why Georg hasopted for betrayal. “ ‘Because she liftedher skirts,’ his father began to flute, ‘be¬cause she lifted her skirts like this, thenasty creature,’ and mimicking her he lift¬ed his (night) shirt so high that one couldsee the scar on his thigh from his warwound...”Georg's father continues to berate him,taunt him, and finally, tottering in a fit offrenzy atop his bed, condemns Georg to‘‘death by drowning.” Georg, disorientedand horrified at this turn of events, fleesthe house and, like the dutiful son he hasalways been, carries out his father’s sen¬tence.Although it is frequently risky and ill- advised to identify characters in litera¬ture unequivocably with their creators,there can be no doubt that many of theprotagonists in Kafka’s work are alterna¬tive forms of his splintered self, and GeorgBendemann is no exception. Kafka himselfreinforced this autobiographical interpre¬tation of his work by providing clues,often cryptically in the names of his char¬acters. George, like Franz, has five letters,and “Bende-” (relieved of its catholicizingsuffix “-mann") has the same vocalic struc¬ture as "Kafka.” That "Bende-” is homon-ymic with "Bande” — the German word for"bands” or "straps” — can only be seen asintentional, given Kafka’s — and Georg’s— ambivalence about his prenuptial pre¬dicament.Indeed, the story was written after meeting a young woman to whom Kafkawas subsequently to become engaged —not once, taut twice — and to whom thestory was dedicated upon its original pub¬lication — Felice Bauer. (Not coincidentallythe same initials as Georg’s fiancee, Frie¬da Brandenfeld.) Kafka’s ambivalencetoward the responsibility of wife and fam¬ily — he could never bring himself to legal¬ize any of his romantic liaisons, convincedthat it would destroy his potency as a writ¬er — seems to be at the crux of The Jud¬gement.Also manifested in The Judgement isKafka’s anxious relationship with his fa¬ther. Like Georg, Franz was in awe of hisfather’s patriarchality (“I, from whom youare sprung.”) and immense physical pre¬sence — the scene in which the elder Ben- demann’s nightshirt flies open is an almostexact recreation of an event in Kafka’schildhood. Yet he was also wracked byunresolved feeling of guilt for not livingup to his father’s expectations — as is evi¬denced in Georg by his musings about hisneglectfulness regarding his father’s "notparticularly clean” underwear.Not all of Kafka’s stories are so overtlyautobiographical. And although a few ofthe stories have since been accordedstatus as modern classics, such as TheMetamorphosis and In The Penal Colony,there are some lesser known works whichalso deserve attention. A Hunger Artist, inwhich an emaciated man practices the lostart of fasting, is one of Kafka’s most cut¬ting comments on the status of artists in his— and our — society, and Report To AnAcademy, where Kafka employs one of hisfavorite techniques, anthropomorphism,to create a cooly ironic portrait of humaninsensitivity, are among the best. An Im¬perial Message, less than three hundredwords in length, typifies the immensesense of exhaustion and futility whichhelped to coin the word "Kafkaesque.”The volume also contains an extensivebibliography of primary and secondaryliterature (containing both English andGerman entries) as well as a chronology ofKafka’s life. There is also a section wherebrief information on individual stories —primarily publication dates, or relevantquotes from the diaries or the letters — isrelayed. Although it is clear that theseparagraphs were not intended as an ex¬haustive scholarly apparatus, there areseveral instances where a note or two, forexample, in The Hunter Gracchus, that“gracchus” is the Latin word for "crow”("kafka” is the Czech word) or that thename of the boatman’s wife, Julie, is iden¬tical to that of Kafka’s mother, would per¬haps shed new light for the reader.For the most part, the translations (thebulk of which are by Willa and Edwin Muir;the remainder by Tania and James Stern)are adequate, yet there are some notableexceptions. In The Judgement (translatedby the Muirs) the German word "derGang”, usually rendered as "the hall¬way”, appears as “lobby.” Not only dosmall apartments, such as the one in whichthe Bendemanns live, seldom have "lob¬bies," but the essence of the German word(which derives from the verb "gehen”, "togo”) implies transition rather than thestasis implied by "lobby.” Location —stairs, hallways, windows, landings — hasalways been significant to Kafka, and thetransition in The Judgement from Georg’sroom to that of his father is an intregalpart of the story. To have missed this inthe translation shows surprisingly littleknowledge of the content of Kafka’s work.There are also several minor problemts,such as non-agreement of subject and verb(family...are) or passages which are sim¬ply awkward. The sentence: "So it wasovershadowed as much as that by the highwall on the other side of the narrow court¬yard” could have been rendered muchmore fluidly and with more structural fi¬delity as "What a shadow was thrown bythe high wall which rose up on the otherside of the narrow courtyard.” Aside fromthese minor annoyances, however, FranzKafka; The Complete Stores, should makea welcome addition to any reader’s li¬brary.STRANGE BREWby Jeff SmithStrange Brew (or The Adventures of Boband Doug McKenzie) is the work of twosmart young comedy writer-performerswho are better than the material they’veput on the screen and, moreover, seemanxious to play that material in such away as to let us know it’s beneath theirtalents.Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas gainedfame on the SCTV television comedy pro¬gram for a number of funny skits and char¬acterizations, including sharp impressionsof Woody Allen and Bob Hope (fans ofNBC’ i Saturday Night Live saw them re¬peat these, along with Moranis’ brilliantparoJy of Dick Cavett, during a guest shoton tnat show last season). But to get back¬ing f'om MGM/UA for this first big-screeneffort, the pair was forced to rely on theirwork as "the McKenzie brothers,” Boband Doug, the beer-swilling Canadiangood ol’ boys also created originally forthe Toronto-based SCTV.The movie makes clear how limited theBob and Doug characters are. For a two- HAS BAD TASTEminute TV skit it was enough just to putMoranis and Thomas in front of the back¬drop of their fictitious TV show, The GreatWhite North, and let the beer jokes fly.(Premise: what will happen if cable-typetechnology makes television So local thatalmost any Joe gets to have his own pro¬gram?)But to come up with a feature-lengthmovie plot for the hapless pair, Moranisand Thomas — who co-wrote and co-direct-ed the film — had to set the movie’s mainaction at a brewery. This is often the prob¬lem with characters whose humor comesfrom being drunk: there are few situa¬tions, even comic ones, to put them in thatwill keep us interested and amused formore than an hour.Moranis and Thomas clearly know this,and it seems to be why they delay gettingthe main story started as long as possible.The movie’s first fifteen or so minutesoccur on the Great White North set, withBob and Doug enjoying their usual stupe¬faction (“Beauty, eh? Take off, youhoser”) while trying to set the stage for their new film. When they finally "roll’em,” this film turns out to be a Super-8amateur epic called Mutants of 2051 A.D.,which of course breaks, sending the "audi¬ence” stampeding after Bob and Doug insearch of refunds.To placate two sobbing young fans, theboys give away the last of their Dad’sbeer money. This leads us finally into themain story, which has Bob and Doug tryingto extort free beer from the "ElsinoreBrewery” in an elaborate riff on Shake¬speare’s Hamlet.Like Hamlet, this story has a hero (onlyhere it is a young woman named "Pamela”and played by Lynne Griffin) whose fatherhas mysteriously died and whose uncle hasquickly married the widowed mother andtaken over the family’s brewing empire.Shakespeare’s tragic hero learned fromhis father’s ghost that the father had real¬ly been murdered, and in Strange BrewPamela gets similar news from her fa¬ther’s taped image on a video gamescreen.Helped by Bob and Doug, Pamela battlesthe schemes of the evil uncle (Paul Dooley)and of Max von Sydow, a mad scientistplotting to take over the world by conta¬minating the brewery’s product with hyp¬ notic drugs.The balance of the film is an even strang¬er brew than Elsinore beer, involving a lu¬natic asylum, a menacing hockey team, aflying dog and lots more beer jokes.Moranis and Thomas clearly had more fun,and are funnier, setting up the movie thanplaying out this plot to its end. There isnothing in the last hour as clever as themany gags about movies and television inthat long introductory segment (these, too,echoing Hamlet, with its famous play-within-a-play and its many jokes abouttheater and acting).In fact, by starting off with Mutants of2051 A.D. and then casting themselves asa slapstick answer to Shakespeare’s Ro-sencrantz and Guildenstern, the bumblingfriends of Hamlet who also help make hislife miserable, Moianis and Thomas subtlyundercut the characters that TV fame andstudio demands required them to play inthis film. Mutants parodies the whole ideaof a Bob and Doug movie even while pre¬paring us for one. These two skillful actorsand knowledgeable writers are telling usthey can do better work than Bob andDoug. If they get their way, their next filmmay not be Hamlet, but it won't beStrange Brew II, either.10—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALTHEATRESMaSTERWORKOGoward Shakespeare Ibsen Shaw O'NeillImagine a machine that records^*sig hts... sounds... sensations,thoughts.. .feelings.. .emotions,even your dreams and nightmares.Then, at the touch of a button,transfers these personal experiencesfrom one mind to another.Any person.Any experience.Anything you can imagine.Vtorld Premiere September 30th 70MM □□ oolby stereo Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372I enjoy my contactLenses made byNoel Coward’sHAY FEVER...a wickedly witty, divinely eccentric,delightfully disastrous 1920's rompMany performances already sold-out!Extended to October 30 to meetticket demand!Sept. 29 - Oct. 30Wednesday - Saturday,8pmSunday, 2:30 & 7:30pm753-4472Visa/MC/Amex Court TheatreThe University ofChicago5535 S. Ellis Avenue Sat., Tues., & Wed., 8pmSunday, 7:30pm...The Ultimate ExperienceMETRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presentsa J F PRODUCTION a DOUGLAS TRUMBULL film "BRAINSTORM"CHRISTOPHER WALKEN NATALIE WOOD LOUISE FLETCHER CLIFF ROBERTSONScreenplay by ROBERT STITZEL and PHILIP FRANK MESSINA story oy BRUCE JOEL RUBINMusic by JAMES HORNER Director ot Photography RICHARD YURlCICH, AS.C.Executive In Charge ot Production JACK GROSSBERGExecutive Producer JOEL L FREEDMAN Produced and Dtrecled by DOUGLAS TRUMBULLPG nwxTM euewa m*sth«0> Wnwd In Super Ponavtson □□<£ 1M3 WGM/oa Entena*»m**t Co The Graduate School ofBusiness PresentsTHE 1983£83CAREERCONFERENCEFRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1983IDA NOYES STUDENT CENTERPANEL SESSIONSEncompassing a variety of fields in businessOPPORTUNITIESTo meet with speakers and panelists at lunchand a closing cocktail receptionREGISTRATION:SEPTEMBER 30, OCTOBER 3STUART HALL LOBBY11 a.m. - 2 p.m.FOR INFORMATION 8 BROCHURE.CONTACT THE BUSINESS STUDENTS ASSOCIATIONSTUART HALL BASEMENTPHONE 962-7093Michael Marwick D.D.S. andMonica Kargl * Marwick D.D.S.Announce theopening of theirDental Practiceat1525 E. 53rd St.Room 604Hyde ParkBank Building752-788810% Student DiscountInsurance AcceptedBRAINSTORIN^THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—11OCTOBER JOHN PROBESM T w T F S S2ndWEEK 3 4 5 6 7 8 93rd 10 11 12 13 14 15 164th 17 18 19 20 21 22 235th 24 yX 31 25 26 27 28 29 3012—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL* • .i < i ( «■ » ; > H - i i i 1IntroducingMORRY’S DELI(Temporary Food Outlet)Located inHUTCHINSON COMMONSBREAKFASTSPECIALSNow serving fullbreakfasts 7 a.m.Monday-Friday!FREE JUMBOCOFFEE BUTTERMILKPANCAKESFREE 2 JUMBO EGGSCOFFEE any styleHASH BROWNSTOASTED BAGELSFREE JUMBO OMELETCOFFEE made w/4 eggsany styleHASH BROWNSTOASTED BAGEL 99*$169$259 Hours: M-F 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m.SAT9a.m. - 8:30p.mCLOSED SUNDAYSLUNCHSPECIALSTry our Salad BarYOU'LL LOVE IT!COMING SOON—OUR EXPANDED12-foot SALAD BAR featuringover 25 selections!FREE OUR OWNCOFFEE EGGMcMORRY $109•Hot Cereals •DonutsLarge Assortmentof Pastries • Fruit•FRESH •FRESHDANISH CROISSANTS(coming soon)OUR NEW BREAKFASTBAR FEATURING LOX, FISHFRESH FRUIT & MUCH MORE JUMBOHOT PASTRAMISANDWICHESJUMBOROAST BEEFSANDWICHESwith trimmingsJUMBO-HOTCORNED BEEFSANDWICH $189$209$209Even though our permanentquarters are not ready yet,MORRY’S still offers youover 70 varieties of sandwichesto choose from!LUNCH SPECIALVz BBQ CHICKEN, RICE,BEANS, COLE SLAW & SODAUnbelievableprice $284 DINNERSPECIALSafter 6 p.m.ITALIANSAUSAGEHOT JUMBOPASTRAMISANDWICHJUMBOROAST BEEFSANDWICH $109$159$179FULL DINNERSincluding beveragesEVERY NIGHT only$284BUY 2 or moreSANDWICHES* GETSOFT DRINKL •Good on CORNED BEEF. ROASTBEEF. PASTRAMI & TURKEYSANDWICHES ONLYKOSHER STYLEHOTDOG only FULL LUNCH ENTREE!MORRY’S HAPPY HOUR SPECIALSfrom 3p.m. to 6p.m. DAILYITALIAN « AA JUMBO HOTSAUSAGE v I 09 PASTRAMI COMING SOONCHEF MORRY’SFRENCH CONTINENTALRESTAURANTLocated in the West end ofHutchinson Commons390all the trimmings all the trimmings SANDWICH $159THEDORMITORYALTERNATIVE THEDORMITORYALTERNATIVESATURDAY NIGHT SPECIALFrom 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Buy any sandwich or dinner at MORRY’S andget a 2nd identical sandwich or diner for |PLUS FREE SOFT DRINK! /2Make MORRY’S your eating stop on Saturday Nights!Wrry’sTelTin Hutchinson Commons1131 E. 57th St.MORRY’Sin the Bookstore5750 S. Ellis Visit our otherMORRY’S Locations:MORRY’Son 55th & CornellSee our special BAGEL offer MORRY’SELLUGARGreat Tasting Mexican Food1603 E. 55thThe Chicago Maroon—Friday. September 30. 1983—25OPENING MONDAYMORRY’SICE CREAM EMPORIUMBAKERY SHOP&SUNDAE STORE(Located in the "C”SHOP)Hours: M-F 7a.m. - 12a.m.SAT9a.m. -8p.m.SUN 11:30 a.m. -12 a.m.Some of our equipment has not yet arrived, so we’re openingwith a limited selection. Thank you for your patience.• OVER 50 FLAVORS OF ICE CREAMS TOCHOOSE FROM!• THE BIGGEST SCOOPS AROUND... ALLTOPPED WITH WHIPPED CREAM, CHERRY& A COOKIE.•10 VARIETIES OF MILK SHAKES.• GREAT ASSORTMENT OF SUNDAES.• WE CARRY HAAGEN-DAES, SCHOEPS,ITALIAN ICE & OUR OWN SPECIAL BLEND.• JUMBO CONES START AS LOW AS 49 *• WE HAVE A WIDE ASSORTMENT OF PIES,FINE FRENCH PASTRIES, FRESH DANISH &HOMEMADE COOKIES.• TRY OUR DRIED FRUITS & TRAIL MIXESMORRY’S IS MAKING ITS OWN HOT FRESH DONUTS, ONLY4 E0BUY ’EM BY THE SACK! I W each* ALL OUR TOILETRIES, SUNDRY, AND PAPER GOODS SOLD ATWHOLESALE PRICES!• MORRY’S “C” SHOP... A GREAT PLACE TO STUDY... A GREAT PLACE TORELAX AFTER THE LIBRARY OR CLASSESOPEN SUNDAY NIGHTS ’TIL MIDNIGHTr “i■BUY ANY SHAKE OR SUNDAE AND GET J■2nd ONE AT V2 PRICE Good only Oct. 3 - Oct. 10tlJMORRY’S ICE CREAM EMPORIUMMORRY’Sin the Bookstore5750 S. Ellis located in the “C” ShopVisit our other MORRY’S locations:MORRY’S on55th & CornellSee our special BAGEL offer Great MORRY’SEL LUGAR1603 E. 55thTasting Mexican Food26—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983I NEWSLL c 1-3®Brave volunteer donates blood.New blood drive beginsBy Hilary Till“Share Life—Donate Blood” is thisyear’s slogan for the University of Chi¬cago Medical Center’s blood donorcampaign. It will be used to invitedonors to the expanded facilities inRoom TW001 of the new Mitchell Hos¬pital, which is located at 5841 S. Mary¬land Avenue.The blood bank’s need for donors canbe illustrated by a few simple facts. Inone year’s time, the Medical Centertransfused about 25,000 units of redblood cells. The blood went to surgery,blood disease and cancer patients, pre¬mature infants and accident victims.In the same period approximately26,000 units of platelets were trans¬fused to Center patients. The plateletsare especially required for leukemiapatients who have an inadequate sup¬ply of the minute protoplasmic discs,which assist in blood clotting.The blood bank is calling for twokinds of donors, whole blood donorsand apheresis donors. The process ofwhole blood donation takes only thirty-five minutes, and Gail Borchers, donorrecruiter of the University’s bloodbank said, “thirty-five minutes of yourtime could mean life to someoneelse.”The process of apheresis requires two to three hours of the prescreeneddonor’s time. Basically in apheresis,white blood cells and platelets are ex¬tracted from the donor’s blood, whilethe remainder of the blood is returnedto the donor. The extracted compo¬nents of the donor’s blood are providedto a patient within 24 hours of the dona¬tion.Numerous campus and communityorganizations are sponsoring blooddrives this fall. Students at PierceTower traditionally sponsor a blooddrive during the autumn quarter,which according to Ms. Borchers “hasbeen very successful.” The Interna¬tional House, the Seminary Cluster (ofHyde Park), and other organizationswill also hold drives in the next fewmonths. “To insure a constant supply,the blood bank relies on students andcommunity members to make regularblood donations. The success of pre¬vious blood drives has helped to meetthe daily demand for blood products,”stated Ms. Borchers.In addition to giving blood throughorganized drives, one can personallymake an appointment with the bloodbank. The phone number for informa¬tion and appointments is 962-6247, andthe facilities’ hours are Mondaythrough Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 8p.m. and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3p.m.CALENDARFRIDAYSAO: Eclectic Ed Mini Course Registration. 9-5 rm.210 Ida Noyes HallCareer & Placement Services: Student EmploymentInformation. 12 noon Reynolds Club 201.Hillel: Sukkot Dinner 7:45 p.m. $4 Hillel $5 othersHillel. reservations 752-1127.Hillel: Simchat Torah Services & Celebration-Or¬thodox 9:15am & 6:15 pm- Conservative 9:30 am.DOC: 48 Hours 7, 9, 11. Cobb $2.Used Book Exchange, Reynolds Club.SATURDAYVolleyball: 10:30 am. 2:30 pm Field House.LSF: To Have & Have Not. 7:15 & 9:30 pm. LawSchool Auditorium $2.DOC: The Verdict. 7, 9, 11 pm. Cobb $2.Used Book Exchange, Reynolds Club.CROSSROADS: Apple-picking for foreign families.9:30-4:30. Register at Crossroads.Nuclear Weapons Freeze Walkathon. Registration10 am 4840 S. Dorchester.Hispanic Cultural Society Dinner. 6:30 pm IdaNoyes. East Lounge. Keynote speaker.OBS: Reception for entering and present Black stu¬dents. 5:00 pm Library Ida Noyes.SUNDAYCross Country: Open 4 mile run 11 am WashingtonPark.Oriental Institute Films: The Big Dig. 2 pm MuseumAuditorium. Free.Hillel: First Bagel & Lox Brunch $1.75/SandwichHillel.Rockefeller Chapel: Festival Day. 8:30 ChancelChoir Rehearsal, 9 am Ecumenical Service of Holy Communion, 10:00 am Religious Instruction forChildren, 11:00 University Religious Service, 12:15Carillon Recital and Tower Tour, 12:45 Luncheon onthe Lawn. No fee or ticket.Renaissance Society: Exhibition Opening - JohnKnight: Museotype.LSF: The Godfather. 8:30 pm Law School. $2.DOC: The City of Women, 8 pm Cobb $2.UC Folk Dancers: International Folk Dancers, IdaNoyes Hall. Teaching 8-9:30, request dancing9:30-11:30.Young Composers Concerts: 8:00 pm. GoodspeedHall. Admission Free.MONDAYSAO: Special Eclectic Ed Mini Course Registration.9-6, Ida Noyes Hall Rm. 210.SAO: Plant Sale. 10-6 Reynolds Club NorthLounge.Women’s Tennis: 3 pm Ingleside Courts.Career & Placement Services: Student Employmentinformation, 3 pm Reynolds Club 201.DOC: Out of the Past, 8 pm, Cobb $1.50.Hillel: Yiddish classes, beginning and advancedmeet together. 5:30 pm.Chemistry Dept: The Activation of Molecular Nitro¬gen in Transition Metal Complexes, Joseph ChattCBE. FRS. 4 pm Hinds 101.Chess Club: 7 pm instruction, 7:30 games. IdaNoyes.UC ChoiT and Chamber Choir: Auditions 2-5pmRockefeller.Law School: Harvard Law Professor Duncan Ken¬nedy speaking on Legal Education. 7 pm Law SchoolClassroom II. Pre-law and first year law Studentsinvited. French club boomsBy George WoodburyLes Beaux Parleurs president LesaMorrison plans this year to create apowerful eight-member directive coun¬cil for the club. The UC French clubwill also expand its program to includefour or five campus-wide events.Talvi Laev, a member of the Frenchclub, explained the need for a struc¬tured council as a response to increas¬ing club activities and membership.“In winter quarter 1983 our small 15-member club exploded,” she said. “Toinformal meetings where people chat¬ted in French we began to add campusparties like Mardi Gras.” Over winterand spring quarters of last year theclub hosted two parties with the North¬western French club, brought sixspeakers to campus and arranged anexcursion to the Art Institute, in addi¬tion to the standard weekly get-togethers to speak French.Laev also cites an increase in clubmembership as a factor in the need fora council. In fall 1982 the club had lessthan twenty members, including bothgraduates and undergrads. In the lasttwo weeks, membership for 1983-4 hastopped 150. The club attributes thechange largely to wide publicity in thedorm complex and on Student Activi¬ties Night, and active attempts to in¬clude any students and staff who are in¬ terested and speak French, even at thebeginning level.Although plans for the structure ofthe directive council are not yet final,Morrison has decided to establish theposts of treasurer, publicity agent, so¬cial chairman, and activities coordina¬tor. The council will meet once a weekthroughout the year, parallel to clubmeetings. Morrison explains, “the pur¬pose behind establishing a directorateis to ensure the smooth operation of thisvery large club. All posts will be filledby elections to take place at our firstclub meeting Saturday October 1, asannounced in the classified of theMaroon.” _Members of the club point to the pro¬gram for 1983-4 in talking about the newcouncil. As Ms. Laev says, “Everyquarter this year we will host at leastone campus-wide event. At the top ofour list are the Mardi Gras party inFebruary, a winter quarter festival ofthe French wrriter Proust, and a bigMay Day rock festival.” Faculty spon¬sor Gerald Honigsblum is also helpingthe club make arrangements oncampus for a fall quarter visit byFrench novelist Marie Cardinal and awinter quarter reading by Eric Char-tier, member of the Comedie Fran-caise.Campus mail roomuun.”In an effort to improve communica¬tion among College students, faculty,and administrators, the University hasopened a mailroom in the basement ofReynolds Club.The mail room contains a file folderfor each College student. All communi¬cations will be delivered there from thecentral College offices (Dean of Stu¬dents, Financial Aid, and Dean of theCollege) as well as from other Univer¬sity offices such as the Registrar, Bur¬sar, and Student Loan Counseling.“The new mail room will encourageand facilitate communication,” saidLevine. “It is difficult and expensive tosearch for students who move withoutsubmitting change of address informa- Autumn quarter hours for the mailroom will be from 9 a.m. until midnightMonday through Friday, and 11 a.m. to6 p.m. Saturday. Hours will be shorterduring the interim, and will be an¬nounced at a later date.Those who wish to deliver mail areasked either to leave it with an atten¬dant who will be on duty at all times, orto drop it in a designated box. Studentswill collect their own messages andcan send mail to the College deans viafolders set aside for their offices.Ten students, chosen at random, willreceive in their folders Monday giftcertificates for $50 worth of books fromthe University of Chicago Press. Win¬ners will be announced.photo by Charles CoantThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30. 1983-27We’re so confidentyou’ll love our Mexican cookingwe’ll pay you one dollarto try it!,—EL LUG AftSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER IIf you love Mexican Cooking, you’ll love EL LUGARBOTANAS (Appetizers)NACHOS (NAH-chos)Cnsp homemade com tortilla chips served with meltedcheese Jalapeno pepper slices added if desired 2.69NACHO DE LE LUGARCnsp homemade tortilla chips topped with our chonzoand bean filling, shredded cheese, guacamoie and >alapeno pepper skies Delicious' 3.49GUACAMOLE DIP (gwah kah MOH-leh)Fresh avacado with diced onions, tomatoes, and ourspecial seasoning's Served m a lettuce cup. garnishedwith com tortilla chips Regular 1.55Large 2.39COM1DAS DE EL LUGAR(dinners)BISTEC RANCHERORanch Style SteakRib-eye steak that is gnted to perfection, then toppedwith our Mexican Saka, skied onions, and yeen peppersServed with nee and beans Flour or com tortiftas 5.25BISTEC ALA MEXJCANAMexican Style SteakStnps of sirtotr steak that is bghtty pan fried, then ummcred m our Mexican salsa, with sliced onions, greenpeppers and potatoes Served with refried beans Flouror com tort lias 3.95CARNE DE POLLE EN MOLE(KAHR-nth de POH-yoh in MOH leh)Chicken m a Special SauceQuarter of a chicken simmered in a dark Mexican sauceDelicious! Served with ncc and beans Flour or corntortdbt 3.19ARROZ CON POLLA (ah RROS con POH-yoh)Chicken with RiceQtcken that has been simmered m our Mexican salsa andserved wtfh nee and beans Flour or com tortilas 2.95PESCADO DE DIA ALA VERACRUZANA(pths-KAH thoh de DEE-a a-LAH vehr a KRUH son a)Fieh of the Day. Veracruz StyleFresh sauteed fish topped with our Mexican salsa, slicedpeen pepper, onions, black and green olives Servedwith nee and beans Garnished with a lemon wedge andfresh cilantro Flour or com tortilas 4.99HUEVOS RANCHEROS(WEH-voh rahn CHEH roh)Ranch Styta Egi"over easy", then bghtty simmered in our Mexicansalsa Served with a sprig of fresh cilantro ncc and beansFlour or com torhlas 1.99 ESPECIAL1DADES DE EL LUGAR(El Lugar’s Specialties)TACO (tah KO>Hard or soft shell com tortilla filled with our speciallyseasoned shredded beef, diced chicken, pork, or chonzo(Mexican sausage) Topped with lettuce, tomatoes,grated cheese and green onions Single Taco. 1.19Taco Platter. 3.95Soft flour tortilla filled with our specially seasonedshredded beef, diced chicken, pork, or chonzo (Mexicansausage) Topped with lettuce, tomatoes, grated cheeseand green onions Single Taco.. 1.19Taco Platter. 3.95ENCHILADAS (en-CHEE lah dah)Soft shell com tortiAa dipped lightly in hot oil, then m ourenchilada sauce, stuffed with Mexican cheese and onions,lopped with sauce and melted cheese Add your choice ofbeef or chicken filbng if desired Single Enchilada. 1.29Enchilada Platter 3.99TOSTADA (tos TAH dah)A flat hard shell com tortilla layered with refried beans orrefned beans with chonzo, grated cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and green onions Chicken or beef topping if desiredSingle Tostada... 1.29Tostada Platter . 3.99BURR1TOS (boo RREE toh)An extra large flour tortilla filled with a refned bean andchonzo filling, topped with chopped onions and gratedcheese Garnished with lettuce, tomatoes, and greenonions Single Burnto 2.49Bumto with nee and beans 2.99FLAUTAS (FLAW tah)Our seasoned shredded beef or diced chicken wrappedm a com tortilla and deep fned Served on a bed oflettuce with tomatoes and green onionsSingle Fiauta 1.19Flauta Platter 3.95TAMALES (tah MAH lay)Shredded beef wrapped in corn husks, spread with acom batter and steamed Served with our own Mexicansalsa and topped with shredded cheese Garnished withshredded lettuce and tomatoes Single Tamale .79Tamale PUtter 2.89 COMB1NACIONS (Combinations)THE ORIGINALOne beef taco, one c heese and onion enchilada, and onechonzo and bean tostada Served with rice and beans 4.19THE VEGETARIANOne guacamoie taco, one cheese and onion enchilada,and one refned bean tostada Served with nee andbeans 4.19EL LUGAR’S COMBINACIONOne chicken taco, one pork enchilada, and one beeftostada Served with rice and beans 4.29ENSALADES (Salads)GUACAMOLE SALAD (gwah kah MOH leh)Guacamoie served with shredded lettuce, sliced tomatoes, and black olives in a flour tortilla shell 2.95TACO SALAD (tahKO)Our special shredded beef served on cnsp lettuce,covered with grated cheese, diced tomatoes, greenonions and black obves. served m a flour tortilla shell 3.29SOPA (Soup)GAZPACHOA refreshing blend of fresh diced vegetables with a tangytomato base Served cold Regular .69Large .90SOPA DE TORTILLA (SOH pah de tohr TEE yah)A chicken broth soup with fned tortilla stnps, tomatoes,onions, fresh garlic and our special seasonings, toppedwith grated chshauhua cheese Regular. .69Large. .90PLATO’S DE LAPP (Side Orders)REFRIED BEANS 69SPANISH RICE 69HOMEMADE CHILI CON CARNE 1 49FIDALE (fee DAY oh)Homemade noodle with a chicken and tomato baseSpecially seasoned Served with tortillas and lemon**dge Regular .69Large .85TORTILLA (tor TEE yah)(3) Flour TortillaFine wheat flour that is made into a thin pancake likebread .39(3) Com TorttfUA thm bread made by grinding white corn .39EL LUGARSimply great tasting Mexican food1603 E. 55th St. 684-651411 a.m. - 9 p.m. a Subsidiary of Morry’s Deli Inc.MONDAY • SATURDAY28—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983Ingrid MooreBy Jeff WolfMemorial services for Ingrid C.Moore, life director of the University ofChicago Lying-In Hospital Women’sBoard, will be held on Saturday, Oc¬tober 8 at 10 a.m. in Bond Chapel.Mrs. Moore was active in many Uni¬versity charities, including theWomen’s Board of the University ofChicago. In addition, Mrs. Moore was amember of Rush-Presbyterian-SaintLuke Medical Center, treasurer of theService League of Chicago, treasurerof the Fortnightly of Chicago and direc¬tor of the Chicago Child Care Center.In lieu of flowers, the family requestscontributions be sent to the Women’sBoard of the U of C, the Women’s Boardof Rush-Presbyterian or the ChicagoChild Care Society.Sovietcontinued from page 5The task of international imagebuilding is complex. In this realm allreports indicate that everything iscarefully orchestrated from above. Amajor factor in such campaigns is theKGB disinformation department. Cer¬tainly all that has been said publicly bySoviet figures has been orchestratedby the KGB disinformation depart¬ment. First there were the denials.Then the statements that Andropovhad nothing to do with it. Then thestatements that Moscow, the center,had nothing to do with it. Then thestatements abroad that indeed it allmay have been a mistake, the fault of“trigger-happy” pilots in the Far East.Anybody who believes any such state¬ments is being taken in. The offering ofEARLY BIRDRUMMAGESALE=PLANTSBAKERV. ETC.SATURDAYOCTOBER 18 A.M.-1:30 P.M.Church of St.Paul and TheRedeemer4945 S. DorchesterEnter 50th St. entrance(815) 758*4313Order NOW/Deliveryby U.P.S. in 2-3 daysBrand newwalnnt finish$49 to rent pl»» mu deposit until May 31 OBITUARIESEmmett Dedmon, Univ. TrusteeEmmett Dedmon By Ravi RajmaneAt the age of 65, Emmett Dedmon, atrustee of the University of Chicago,died September 18,1983 at Billings Hos¬pital. There he had been battling un¬successfully against a prolonged ail¬ment. In addition to the position withthe University, Mr. Dedmon was alsoknown as an author, historian, newspa¬per editor, and for his support of Chi¬cago area civic organizations.Mr. Dedmon became a Trustee of theUniversity on July 8, 1966. He alsoserved as the chairman of the universi¬ty’s Alumni Fund. Mr. Dedmon be¬came the first recipient of the AlumniService Medal which was awarded ear¬lier this summer. Born in Nebraska in 1918, he came toChicago to join the University in 1935as an undergraduate. Here his talentfor journalism evinced itself as he be¬came the editor of what was then theDaily Maroon. Mr. Dedmon was amember of the graduating class of1939.During World War II Mr. Dedmonenlisted in the now defunct Army AirCorps and eventually climbed to therank of captain. While flying over Ger¬many in 1943, his plane was shot down.He parachuted to safety but was latercaptured by the Germans and impri¬soned for nearly two weeks in a warcamp. His novel, Duty to Live, is large¬ly based on his experiences while in¬carcerated. Mr. Dedmon was also theauthor of 7 other books, many of whichdeal with the history of Chicago.VIEWPOINT Idiffering lines for domestic audiencesand for foreigh listeners is a standardSoviet practice.What can be done by the US and itsallies? Almost nothing.Russia has been largely self-suffi¬cient, for centuries. The Russian popu¬lation has little say about its politicalleadership, which therefore is free togrant or withhold more than mere sus¬tenance. Reagan figured that out rightaway. Once the few levers were usedafter the invasion of Afghanistan andthe crushing of Solidarity, there is ab¬solutely nothing to hold back for Flight007. The latest CIA figures claim that5% of Soviet g.n.p. is related to the in¬ternational milieu, but even that isprobably excessive. For years the Rus¬sians and Soviets have been going italone, and there is nothing to preventthem from continuing the same tack.WHYPAYRENT?Instead of you or yourfamily paying rent, for$1520 down they canbuy a studio condo foryou and receive all thebenefits of a tax shelterunder new IRS rulings.Only a few units left(some larger unitsavailable.)For a limited time only—Fixed-Rate Financing 10.6%r nr fj i ‘r,,= ~~TheAdventureCall anytime - 944-2559SHYNESSCAN BE CRIPPLINGGroup sessions onovercoming shyness andimproving social skills.TAKE THE FIRSTSTEP:CALL DR. LAURA LERNER848*5700MAKE THE MOST OFYOUR COLLEGE EXPERIENCE In my opinion, the major “sanction”should be to include the USSR in theoutside world, not to exclude it. Theworld’s third largest country, now with272 million people, the world’s secondgreatest industrial and military power,cannot be ignored or wished away.Boycotting the Olympics was the big¬gest foreign policy mistake Cartermade: tourists by the tens of thousandsshould have flooded the USSR, andbrought themselves, their readingmatter, and their ideas with them. Ex¬changes should be encouraged: thoseexchanges who do not defect will re¬turn home forever altered. The onlyway to hope to civilize the USSR isfrom within, not from without.Richard Hellie is Professor of RussianHistory in the Social Science Divisionand Chairman of the Russian Civiliza¬tion program in the CollegeStudios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridaySat. 10-4FUJICHR0ME100MAKE YOUR PICTURES COMEALIVE! WITH CRISPERCOLORS, SHARPER DETAIL.Fujichrome 100 makes it alt possible' Greens bluesyellows and reds have never been so color terrificso lifelikeFuiichrome 100 s wider exposurelatitude gives you more picture takingfreedom Colors stay bright and trueeven in clouds or shade Try a rolltoday FUJIfilm* camerasThe University of ChicagoBookstorePhotographic Department2nd FloorViso 962-7558 M/C Gaining recognition for his work withthe Sun-Times throughout the 1950sand 1960s, Mr. Dedmon became Edito¬rial Director and Executive Vice-Pres¬ident of the Sun-Times and the DailyNews (Field Enterprises) in 1968. Lastfall Mr. Dedmon was elected to the Chi¬cago Journalism Hall of Fame. Havingresigned from Field Enterprises in1978 he then became a senior consul¬tant in an international public relationsfirm.Mr. Dedmon was also immersed incivic affairs. The myriad groups inwhich he was involved range from theChicago Urban League to the TavernClub to the Japan — America Societyof Chicago.Mr. Dedmon is survived by his wife.Claire; a son, Jonathan; two brothersand a sister. A memorial service washeld at the University of Chicago BondChapel at 3:00 P.M. on Friday, Sep¬tember 23.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 advertisingEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesThe Chicago Maroon—Friday. September 30, 1983—29■ ▼The Third StringThere are two words that might become a rallying cry for a certain localfootball team this year..“No Negativism!”And why would U of C football head coach Mick Ewing ask that there be nonegativism this year among a university that hasn’t exactly slept out to gettickets to its varsity football games in the past ten or so years? One simplereason: “Last season we went 0-9,” said Ewing. “This year’s team is not thesame team that went 0-9 last season, by any stretch of the imagination.”Thanks to an extensive recruiting program, Ewing has 27 freshmen on thisyear’s squad, but they are not just a group of guys that decided to throw somepads on once they got to college. This year’s squad boasts players who havemade Conference or District All Star teams at their high schools, players whoare, essentially, serious about playing football. Coupling the freshman withreturning players from the last three years, Ewing feels that “there will be justone, if any at all, team in our conference that we can’t compete with.”In the three games to date, a victory over Grinnell and two losses to Knoxand Washington University (St. Louis), Chicago’s defense and passing attackemerged as the team’s strengths, and Ewing and his staff feel that going to aset lineup on offense may be the key to putting some scores together to supportthe efforts of the defense.The performances of Andy Jaffee and Ted Repass against Wash U. point tothe talent Ewing has in his freshman class. Jaffee, the team’s defensive line¬man of the week, posted 15 tackles while Repass, at middle linebacker, added11 and a fumble recovery. “They are solid football players, and very aggres¬sive,” Ewing said. Bringing those two together with an experienced secondary,and veteran linemen Dave Rispler and Steve Kapotas, Ewing feels that “it’sgoing to take a damn good football team to score against us on the ground.”The results thus far support that statement, as no one has scored on theground against Chicago this year, and all three touchdowns given up occurredon long passes in long yardage situations.Offensively, coach Myron Smith feels that deciding on a set lineup will helpincrease the team’s output. Switching personnel frequently in the first threegames, especially at the quarterback spot, throws off timing, according toSmith, “and puts us in long yardage situations, due to missed assignments andprocedure penalties.” Ewing will start senior Don Haslam at quarterbackagainst Illinois College tomorrow, even though freshman Matt Schaefer hashandled much of the signal calling so far.The team produced just one net yard rushing against Wash U., but that isdeceiving for two reasons. First of all, the NCAA rules dictate that yardage lostdue to sacks counts as rushing yards, not passing yards, as in the NFL. Also, asEwing points out, “we are a passing team. We are not too disturbed about lowtotals in rushing.Many encouraging signs have appeared in the first third of the season.Though the team lost to Knox, a team which Ewing felt did not measure up toChicago, and to Wash U., a loss which “we have no need to bow our headsabout,” the days of the winless Chicago patsies should, and hopefully will, beforgotten.Football Notes: Haslam is coming back after a knee injury, and startingtailback Bob Dickey has been hampered by a hip pointer and will not playtomorrow. Fullback Bruce Montella is also out with an ankle injury, whichplaces Carl Oros and Tony Lee in the backfield. Players of the week: Receiver:Eric Smith, Offensive Lineman: Tom Lee, Offensive Back: Dickey, Def. Line¬man: Jaffee, Linebacker: Repass, and Def. Back: Dennis Werner. McCarthy’s second year at the University, as last year he was assistant facili¬ties director. When Resch moved up to Women’s Athletic Director, Mary JeanMulvaney (Director of Physical Education) offered McCarthy the job.“This first year is an educational experience for me,” said McCarthy, whofeels the best course to take is “to remain as consistent as possible with whatMs. Resch did...she did an outstanding job.”Among the minor changes this year (no, they aren’t any drastic moves beingtaken) is a decision, which McCarthy attributes to economics, to cut thenumber of contests in the course of each season, possibly by limiting thenumber of teams eligible for playoffs so that aspect of the season doesn’t dragon and on.Another problem is softball; two years ago teams played up to ten or fifteengames, while last year teams played five or so games out on the midway quick¬sand. Resch had recommended that softball be dropped due to problems withfields, scheduling, and weather, but McCarthy stated that the IM Office will tryto run something in the spring, even if it’s the weekend tournaments similar tolast year’s format. But the number of games, unfortunately, will remainlow.McCarthy’s job consists of promoting and scheduling all competitions, andalso handling personnel such as game officials, office help, and student super¬visors. He also conducts special clinics for the IM Directors of the houses toinform them of policies and rules not only of the sports in general but of the,well, let’s say, unique ways the school has changed the sports around to fit theprogram.Two teams that seem to have things headed in the right direction are thewomen’s tennis team (3-0 so far) and the soccer team, whose record stands at1-0-1. The field hockey team has checked in with a 2-3-1 mark. In the Sauk Val¬ley Tournament the team came away with a win, loss, and tie. Marion tied theMaroons at one, Franklin beat them 1-0, but Chicago came back to top Ashland,3-0. In the last tournament game Eastern Michigan dropped Chicago, 5-0.Since then the team has defeated Kalamazoo, 3-1, and lost to Notre Dame,6-0.For the first time in recent years the soccer team won against Purdue-Calumet, knocking them off by a 4-1 score. Last year the Maroons lost 6-1, andthe two years before that by identical 5-0 scores. Coach Barry DeSilva has set a4-4-2 lineup for this year, which is basically a defensive alignment. The twoforwards, sophomore Jason Pressman and freshman Dave Ansani, combinedfor three goals out of that formation Wednesday, while halfbacks Mark Scol-foro and Todd Silber have stabilized the midfield. Silber, one of the team’sleading scorers his first three years here, is returning after taking a year off.His offensive power became apparent Wednesday when he opened the scoringwith a 25-yard rocket the Purdue keeper had no prayer of catching up to.If anybody out there is interested in writing field hockey this season, call theMaroon office or drop by. Experience isn’t necessary, but it would help.Kevin McCarthy has replaced Rosie Resch as IM Director this year. This is Since we’re getting stumped here, we’ll have to throw out some trivia ques¬tions. Can you give the number that Jay Berwanger wore when he played foot¬ball here? Better yet, what the hell did Jay Berwanger do when he played hereanyway that was so important? Can you name the players on the present WhiteSox team that have World Series rings? What position did pitching coach DaveDuncan (also of the White Sox) play when he was in the major leagues? Andfinally: five of the greatest players of their generations are Ernie Banks, JimRice, Gaylord Perry, Dick Allen, and Phil Niekro. Five of the not exactly greatones include Rick Monday, Tom Paciorek, Sox announcer Ken Harrelson, BillBuckner, and Bill North. What do the five not-so-greats have in common thatthe five all-time greats do not? Answers to all these next week./IEclectic Ed is a year-round program of quarterly non-credit courses and workshops offered for a low cost by Student ActivitiesOffice. Registration: Sept. 26-Oct. 14, M-F 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.. Room 210, Ida Noyes Hall. Special Registration for Staff & Faculty: Oct. 3 & 4, 5 p.m.Bring your VCID. NO PHONE RESERVATIONS, PAYMENTS IN CASH ONLY, AT TIME OF REGISTRATION. CHECKS PAYABLE TO THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. For more information call SAO at 962-9554. 6 p.m.IVENGAR STYLEHATHA YOGA• Kathleen M. Wright •$40 for 8 sessions JAMNASTICS• Judy Nielsen •$17.50 for 6 sessions$35 for 12 sessions$52.50 for 18 sessions AEROBIC DANCE• Louise Little • BEGINNINGAEROBICS$20 for 8 sessions$35 for 16 sessions • Hilary Barnes •$15 for 6 sessionsCobb 112Wednesdays 6:30-8 p.m.Oct. 12-Nov. 30 Ida Noyes 3rd floor TheatreTues. & Thurs. 5:15 p.m.-6:15 p.m.Sat. 10 a m.-11:30 a.m.Oct 4-Nov. 10 $25 for 12 sessionsIda Noyes Cloister ClubMon. & Wed. 5:15 p m.-6:15 p.m.Oct. 5-Nov. 23 Ida Noyes Cloister clubTues. & Thurs. 6:30 p.m.-7:15 p.m.Oct. 11-Nov. 17 BELLY DANCING• Rosalinde Vorne •$15 for 6 sessionsBeginners 5.30-6:30 p.m.Intermediate 6:30-8 p.mshort course: Nov. 15-Nov. 29Ida Noyes Dance Room(students must have athleticfacilities pass)$7 for 3 sessionsAFRO-CARIBBEANDANCEv9 • Harry Detry •$25 for 12 sessions BALLROOMDANCE• Arturo Perez-Reyes •$25/prsn. for 5 sessionsIda Noyes 3rd floor TheatreMondays 6 p.m.-10:30 p.m JAZZ DANCE• Barbara Dressier •$35 for 12 sessionsIda Noyes Cloister ClubMon & Wed. 6:30 p.m -8 p mOct. 10-Nov. 9 (specialized classes, call forinformation)Oct. 10-Nov. 7 Ida Noyes 3rd floor TheatreWed. & Fri 5:30 p m -6:45 p m(beginners)6:45-8 p m.(advanced beginners)INTRODUCTIONTO JAZZ GUITAR• Johnse Holt •$35 for 6 sessions DOLL MAKING• Diane Levesque •$30 for 6 sessions IRISH TINWHISTLE• Michael Donaghy •$20 (includes whistle) VARIATIONS INVEGETARIANCOOKINGfor 6 sessionsWeiss Coffeeshop(above Harper Library)Wed. 8:15 p.m.-9:15 p.m.Oct 12-Nov. 16 Ida Noyes Rm 217Wed. 7 p.m.- 8 p.m.Oct. 12-Nov. 16 Weiss Coffeeshop(above Harper Library)Thurs. 7 p.m.-8 p.m.Oct. 13-Nov. 10 • Catherine Wilson •$35 for 5 sessions BLUESHARMONICA• David Dorfman$20 for 6 sessionsIda Noyes 3rd floor KitchenTues. 5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.Oct. 11-Nov. 8 Weiss Coffeeshop(above Harper Library)Thurs. 7:30 p.m.Oct. 11-Nov. 830—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983•ME - TTr *'*SPOiTSDenis Werner (40) makes a tackle in a game against Knox. photo b7 Char,es CoantWomen’s tennis smashesBy Jane LookUnder the guidance of returningcoach Christel Nicholls, the 1983 UCwomen’s tennis team opened its seasonSeptember 12th with two weeks of in¬tensive “pre-season” training. Despitethe miserable weather that greeted thetennis players, the team thus farboasts a perfect 3-0 record againstrivals Illinois Institute of Technology,Lawrence University, and Northeas¬tern University.During the pre-season practices theteam began to establish the lineup forthe season. Coach Nicholls said, “Mostof the players were prepared for pre¬season. Everyone is improving so much that the lineup could change. Ibelieve the hard work of the pre-seasonis beginning to pay off and I look for¬ward to a really exciting season!”Playing the number one singles spotfor the third straight year is Jane Look.Beth Fama again captured the numbertwo position and Caren Gauvreau se¬cured the number three spot. These topthree players are third year students.Carrie Beach, an exciting second yearplayer, will provide depth at thenumber four position. Another skilledplayer, third year student StephanieFalk, will contribute consistency at thenumber five spot. The followingplayers will alternate at the sixth spot:Soccer notches victor'By Anthony CashmanThe U of C soccer team, notched itsfirst victory of the season Wednesdaybehind the strength of the forward lineand the midfield. Forwards Dave An-sani and Jason Pressman combined forthree goals in the second half to propelthe Maroons past Purdue-Calumet,4-1.In the middle of the second half An-sani, a freshman, took a pass fromfreshman midfielder Alvin Marr on theleft side and drove home the game-win¬ner. The goal lifted the team since Pur¬due had just scored an equalizer on adirect penalty kick inside the box.After Ansani’s goal, the Maroonscapitalized on mistakes made by theirlet-down opponents. Sophomore JasonPressman scored two insurance goalslater in the second half. Marr recordedanother assist on the third goal, whilePressman hit the fourth mark from arebound off of the Purdue goalkeeper.The Maroons’ first goal came on a 25-yard blast to the upper right corner bysenior captain Todd Silber.The game was characterized by ag¬gressive midfield and forward play.Several players stated that duringTuesday’s practice, coach Barry De-Silva seemed to hit upon the right com¬bination for his offensive attack, an at¬tack that was less than potent againstGrinnell in the season opener. In thatgame Chicago could not mount the of¬fensive as they played Grinnell to ascoreless, double-overtime tie.DeSilva was moderately pleasedwith the day’s results. He stated thathis team played a “decent game.” Thecoach elaborated on his plan as he de¬scribed his instruction to Pressman to“play up high” to enable him to breakfree and create opportunities. DeSilvawas also pleased with the control of his outside midfield which repeatedly fedthe two forwards.“We should be able to stay in most ofour games this season,” DeSilvaadded.One problem could be the team’s ex¬treme youth. Wednesday’s game fea¬tured one senior, five sophomores, andfive freshman. Another weakness, ac¬cording to DeSilva, is the lack of depthpast the thirteenth or fourteenth man.Countering these weaknesses shouldbe the well-balanced skill of all of thelines (forwards, midfielders, and de¬fenders) and the outstanding play offreshman sweeper Bo Flores and soph¬omore goalkeeper Joe Mario, whoseems to possess a tremendous aware¬ness in the box. Mario handled nu¬merous long shots and crosses with rel¬ative ease.Barry DeSilva and his team carrytheir unbeaten (1-0-1) record to Wis¬consin this weekend to play St. Nor-bert’s and Lawrence, in the team'sfirst two conference matches of theseason.Volleyball edgesBy Spender ColdenAt first glance the University of Chi¬cago women’s volleyball team’s recordof 1-5 looks dismal. However, on closerperusal it does not seem so bad, as allof Chicago’s opponents thus far havebeen from higher divisions.In the first match of the season the Uof C women played a very good gamebut lost to Chicago State by the respect¬able score of 2-1. Chicago State, alongwith the Maroons’ other opponents thusfar, is a Division II school, while theMaroons are in Division III.In the next match of the season theteam came up against strong competi¬tion from Pi lrdup-r1 sin root an NIA! U of C shows signs of lifeBy Mark BlockerDespite a solid performance by thedefense unit, the University of Chicagofootball team came up just short forthe second week in a row, dropping a10-0 decision to the Battling Bears ofWashington University (St. Louis),Saturday night in St. Louis. The losswas the second in three tries for theMaroons, following promising perfor¬mances at home against Grinnell andon the road versus Knox.The Maroons held the WashingtonUniversity club scoreless for the entirefirst half and part of the second, beforeWU finally struck. The Bears inheritedexcellent field position following a UCpunt, getting the ball at their own 47and driving all the way in six plays forthe game’s only touchdown. The 53-yard march was capped by a 35-yardpass from Dave Sides to Anthony Wattwith just under two minutes remainingin the third stanza. Overall Sides couldmanage to complete only six passes in19 attempts, for just 110 yards.Washington added an insurancemarker midway through the finalquarter to complete the scoring. Thedrive started from the Bears’ 33 yardline and was halted by the Maroon de¬fense at the UC 15. The 52-yard driveculminated in a 32-yard field goal byDexter van Horne, producing the even¬tual winning margin of 10-0.Although the Maroon offense wasIITfourth year student Kate Sparks andsecond year students Krista Choi andGrace Park. Adding depth to the rosterare fourth year student Klarita Wild-haber and second year students ConnieLavieri and Denise Pagnucci.The team opened its season Sep¬tember 21 by hosting IIT. The teammanhandled IIT, with every playerwinning her singles and doublesmatches. The final score was 9-0.Fresh from their impressive opener,the team travelled to Appleton, Wis¬consin Sept. 24 to face Lawrence Uni¬versity. Once again there was no stop¬ping UC’s momentum. The team didnot yield a single match en route to its9-0 win.The team next prepared to travel toNortheastern University Sept. 26. Bothcoaches and players expected a closematch, as U of C conquered Northeas¬tern last year in a cliffhanger, 5-4.Once again Northeastern proved to beno pushover. Winning their singlesmatches were Fama at number twoand Sparks at number six. Thus, if U ofC were to win the match the teamwould have to win all three doublesmatches. They did just that, taking thematch, 5-4.At number one doubles. Look andFama won an exciting match, 5-7, 7-5,6-1. Gauvreau and Y’each capturedtheir number two match, 7-6, 6-1, andChoi and Sparks conquered the numberthree spot, 6-0, 6-0.Thus the team began the 1983 seasonin winning fashion. When asked aboutthe outlook for the season, coach Ni¬cholls responded, “This will be ourfirst year at playing in the MidwestAthletic Conference for Women(MACW) Tennis Championships. Ihave no doubt that the U of C women’ssquad will leave their mark at theChampionships. I am thrilled to be in¬volved with this young but very talent¬ed group of student athletes. held in check the entire game, they didhave several good opportunities. A DaKim interception early in the firstquarter set up the UC offense at theBears’ 43 yard line. However, after anunsuccessful fourth down conversion,WU took over on downs at the samespot. The UC squad also had a primeopportunity midway through the fourthperiod, after linebacker Ted Repass re¬covered a fumble in Wash. U. territoryat the 39. But once again, the WU de¬fense refused to yield, and the Maroonscame up empty.As Head Coach Mick Ewing wasquick to point out, the UC offenseshowed definite signs of life throughthe airways. Fifteen completions in 32attempts netted 177 yards for theMaroons, who had only one pass inter¬cepted. Freshman Matt Schaefer, whostarted the game, led the attack with 8of 17 on target for 97 yards. Don Has-lam saw some action, pegging 4 of 9 for47 yards.Coach Ewing was highly comple¬mentary of the job Schaefer did in theWashington game, and called him “asgood as any freshman quarterback inthe league.” However, Ewing expectsto start Haslam, a senior who injuredhis knee in pre-season at QB when theMaroons take the field tomorrowagainst Illinois College.While the offense continues to im¬prove, this year’s UC defense contin¬ues to shine. Freshman defensivetackle Andy Jaffee, whose 15 tackles (4solo) spearheaded the UC defensive at¬tack, turned in a sterling performance.In addition, Kim, Dennis Werner, andRepass each collected 11 tackles, whileGene Fedor chipped in ten. In fact, de¬spite the 10 points allowed by Chicagoin the second half, the defensive unitgave up just 120 yards of total of¬fense.The only trouble the Chicago defenseseems to be having this season is inlong yardage situations, as all three ofthe touchdowns they allowed havecome in such situations. Grinnellscored its lone TD on a fourth and six,Knox cashed in on third and nine, whilethis week’s defensive miscue, the 35-vard scoring pass, occurred on a thirdand 14. The defense has yet to yield atouchdown on the ground this season.Tomorrow the Maroons travel toJacksonville, Illinois to square offagainst Illinois College, who brings an0-4 record into the contest, as they havelost to Kalamazoo and Concordia (Illi¬nois) in recent weeks. IC will join theMidwest Conference for the 1984-85season. According to Ewing, the ICsquad has an excellent defense againstthe run. and consequently he plans toemphasize the pass even more.Washington Univ. 10, Chicago 0Chicago 0 0 0 0 0Wash. U. 0 0 7 3 10ChicagoWashU.First Downs 12 18Net Rushing Yardage 1 213Net Passing Yardage 171 110Net Return Yardage 60 71Pass Att-Comp-Int 32-15-1 19-6-1Total Offense 172 323Punts-Avg 9-33.9 6-38.3Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2 1Penalties-Yds. 9-62 5-60Scoring Summary:WU-Watt, 35, pass from Sides (VanHorne kick)WU-Van Horne, FG, 32into first conference seasonteam which is from a higher division.The Maroons' next three matchescame in the IIT tournament. AgainstRockford College the team lost by a 2-0score, but against Trinity College theMaroons came up with their first victo¬ry of the season, also by a 2-0 score.Host Illinois Institute of Technology de¬feated the Maroons later in the tour¬ney, 2-0.In their next match the U of C playedAurora College. Playing without two oftheir starters, the Maroons lost 3-0. Theabsence of the two starters apparentlymade a big difference, according tocoach Rosalie Resch. “The team mighthave been able to go five games (in the match) and maybe could have won.”said Resch.The nucleus of the team is made upof four seniors. Celeste Travis, who is ahitter, and Karen Kitchen, who is a set¬ter, are the captains. Beverly Davisand Randi W’agner, both hitters, arethe other two seniors. The other twospots are filled from the very strongunderclassman bench.This is the first year the team is amember of the Midwest Athletic Con¬ference for Women (MACW), whichmakes them eligible to play in Confer¬ence Championships. Coach Resch op¬timistically states that “the teamshould do well in the Conference.”The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983—3TOWNER SAYS SELL IT! 6 roomcondo, completely redone - newwalls, new windows, new baths, newkitchen, new electric, new . . . It’s at56th and Harper. In the $60's.CHECK IT OUT!THE MEWS. Lovely, lovelybuilding. This 1 bedroom plus studyhas natural woodwork, beamed ceil¬ing, and a woodburning fireplace. Asuper buy! $50’s.WALK TO REGENSTEIN. 56THAND UNIVERSITY. 3 bedroomco-op. Very desirable building.$60’s.NEED A 2 BEDROOM OR A 1bedroom plus den? The choice isyours with this charming condo. Lotsof wood trim and lots of sun! Greatlocation, too. Move-in condition.CHECK THE VIEW from thisspacious 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart¬ment in a prestigious hi-rise co-op.Luxurious living for only $45,000.Limited financing. Rent or optionpossible.TAKE A LOOK AT THIS KIT¬CHEN! Designed for serious cook¬ing, it features a center work bankthat opens onto a family recreationcenter. This 6 room condo has off-street parking and can be vours for$62,000.SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM +STUDY overlooking the park.Recessed lighting, skylight and lotsof windows make this modern kit¬chen a cook's delight.OPEN HOUSE Sunday. October 2.1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.. 1125 S. ParkTerrace, Dearborn Park. Spend moretime with your family in this lovely 4bedroom executive townhouse only 5minutes from the Loop! Pool, jogg¬ing paths, tennis courts, volleyball.$139,900. Or call 955-1200 today foryour private showing.ON A QUIET STREET in the heartof Hyde Park, this 3 bedroom comeswith beautiful woodwork, manybuilt-ins. and a park view - in anenergy-efficient building. $50's.GREAT CAMPUS 2 BEDROOMAT KENWOOD AND 56TH. Enjoythe bright sunlight of this corner con¬dominium during the day and relax infront of your cozy woodburningfireplace during the evening cool fallevenings!UNIVERSITY PARK - I bedroom.I bath condo. High floor withsouthern exposure - campus view.Priced to sell at $39,000!COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION COT¬TAGE - remodeled inside to makethis 1890’s house into a lovely 1980’shome. Lovely breakfast area over¬looking private yard. 2 woodburningfireplaces, parquet flooring, plus 4bedrooms + 2'/i baths make this aHyde Park special. Call to see.LUXURY CO-OP - this veryspacious. 2 bedroom. 2 bath, witheast/west exposures is new on themarket. It’s all been redecorated withnewly sanded floors. The building isspecial - 24 hour security, parking,bike room, and elegant lobby. Call tosee. $50's.COMPLETELY REMODELEDstudio apartment. New walls, kit¬chen. bath, carpeting. It sparkles.Conveniently located in central HydePark. It's a buy. $20's.RENT OR SALE - RAY SCHOOLDISTRICT. 3 bedrooms in complete¬ly rehabbed building. Modern kit¬chens. and 2 baths. Hardwood floors.Sunporch. Convenient to shoppingand Osteopathic Hospital. $58,000.HILO REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.955-1800 J CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publicstion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACE4Vi room furnished garret apartment 5508 S.Cornell, 2 bedrooms, small kitchen, no showerin bath, three air conditioners. Suitable formarried couple or single. Rent includes elec¬tricity as well as individual controls on gasheat. $490 per month with security deposit of$735. Shown by appointment only RA 6 3966 ( 9-5)Room for rent in family home. Share kitchen &bath. 2 blks from Regenstein. $150/mo or in ex¬change for child care-pref latter. 363-8184Hyde Park Blvd nr Kimbark 7 rm-4 br/nrShops Trans/Cpt (heat, hot water) Quiet $600.752 51462 bdrm 2ba 1450 E 55th University Garden Apt.High floor call days 940-0675. Weekends & even¬ings 432-2434 or 642-6220.Lg Private Room w Bath 52nd Greenwood $200mo refer UC student 493-2621 Evng 984-1473DayFEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to shareapt with female U of C Grad Student. Spacioussunny 2 bdrm apt. 5th fl elev building conv tocampus and shopping. Rent: $285mo. -f Viutilities. Prefer considerate non-smoker. AvailImmed Call 363-6529.Mature grad student or working woman toshare 2 bedroom/2 bath apt at 5050 S LakeShore. Rent $317.947-0332 evenings or Sunday.CLASSIC SOUTH SHORE DRIVE BLDG(just 11 units)First available apt. in two years. Onebedroom-carpeted & freshly painted. Includesheat. Excellent security. Building is very wellkept. Presently bldg is all adults. Some Univer ¬ sity people. No dogs or cats. University bus 1blk #1 bus in front 1C Blks. One year lease $295mo Call 221 6606.COOP FOR SALEImmed. Occupancy on a 2 bedroom, 1 bathwith den coop in South Shore. Building & apt.well maintained with easy access to bus &train. $22,500 includes refrigerator, stove,dishwasher and a natural fireplace. Financingavail. Call Mr. Wardian 493-2525 or 895-5318.Beverly Shores Ind. 45 Minutes from U of C bycar or train. Two 3 bedroom homes near lake.$65,500 and $75,000. Call Renard 219-962-4298.Unfurnished studio for rent in Univ. Pk. Imm.oc. $365. Days 388 1477; Ev. 684-1339.Furnished one-bedroom apt. for rent; Top fl.Univ. Pk. $550. Days 388-1477; Ev. 684-7477.Roommate wanted, 1 bdrm in 3 bdrm twnhse$275 amenities-free pk, wbf wash/dryer,security, balcony 752-8514, eves. & or leavemsg.CONDO FOR SALE56th & Kimbark: 2 Bdrm, Eat-in Kitchen, pan¬try Full Dr, can be used as 3rd br. Oak Firs,Sunny, Courtyard, $59,000 876-3512 Days.Beau Fur Rms/Apt Ut Inc No Smok $250 363-3458.Renovated 3 Bedrn condo for rent in Kenwood.Sunny, 2000 sq. Ft. 2 baths, din. rm, sunrm,new kitchen w/dishwasher, woodbrn frplce,hdwd firs. On campus bus rte. Pets ok. availnow. $795 negot. Mr. Zelman O: 726-9490, H:440-0514.Vegetarian graduate student wanted to sharelarge 3bdr apt. Sunroom, Gourmet Kitchen, oncampus. 947-0847 P.M.FOR SALECanon Macro Lens. Used. 50mm 3.5 $109 ModelCamera 1342 E. 55th 493-6700Fuji VHS 120 Tapes $10.95 Model Camera 1342E. 55th 493-6700TDK SA 90 Tapes 10 for $29.90. Model Camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700Ingleside Commons Condominiums, 5211-13 S.Ingleside One bedroom units from $35000 NewKitchens new baths parking includeddeveloper pays asmts for one year pay only$395 1st Year you need only $1350 to buy andmove in FHA-VA Financing Avail 12% Fixedrate financing.Couch $15 dresser $15 Table $15 radio $15 &more thinqs - MOVING & MUST SELL call 962- 9554 & leave name & number.AMC HORNET 1976 42,000 miles, radial tires,new battery, AM/FM radio. Good Condition$1200 Call 241-6766.BABY items, house-swing, toys, training potty,jump-seat, etc. No clothes. Priced $5 tops Call241-6766.HONDA 360 Motorcycle Low Mileage RunsWell Everything Works 2 Locks $300 Keith 684-4782.FURNITURE SALE: chairs, tables, lamps,desks, beds. All must go immediately. 752-0946.Used Book Sale. Aspidistra Bookshop. 25% offall books thru Oct. 3. 2630 N. Clark St. Noon9pm daily, Sunday l-9pm.TDK Cassette TapesDS90 10 for $29.90AD90 10 for $24.90Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700New Nikon Autofocus In Stock!!!Model Camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700Free Film!!!Receive One Roll of Film Freewith every color Negative FilmPrinted and Processed atModel Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-67001978 Dodge Omni, 4 dr. htch, auto, ps, a/c,radio, radials. No rust. New shocks, alter¬nator. Excellent Condition. Ray or Daeng 363-3666.71 Chevelle cheap $800 lots of new parts racingsheets 752-4660 evenings.VW Bug '71 Runs very well. I'm leaving US.Must sell! $585or bio. 752-5326.Large desk ($75), 3 piece child b.room set($120) 4 Dining chairs ($120), pricesnegotiable, Call 324-4934evenings.GOOD USED FURNITURE. Three garages ofbeds, chests, rugs, lamps, appliances etc. Willbe sold Saturday Oct. 1st, 10 AM-4 PM (raindate Sunday). It's all in the alley running northfrom 56th St. between Dorchester and Ken¬wood.Moving Sale: GE portable dishwasher, 5-cycleenergy-saving button, avocado with butcherblock top. Also brown Hotpoint 14cufrefrigerator. Both excellent working cond. $100E A. 241-7229.PEOPLE WANTEDENTHUSIASTIC CAMPUS REP to sellSHARE UFE —DONATE BLOODuniversity of Chicagomedical centerBLOOD BANKCall 962-6247 for appointment/ \DR. M. R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55«h363-6100IgAmenunQpiometnc A»oc«Bonm Jmarian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. CorneiiPut the pastin your future!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof \intage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.—All new kitchens and appliances — Community room—Wall - to - wall carpeting — Resident manager—Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdoor — Laundry facilities onparking each floorStudios, One. Two and Three Bedrtx)m apartments.One Bedroom from $505 — Two Bedroom from $700Rent includes heat, ax;king gas, and master TV’ antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643 1406mse1642 East 56th StreerIn Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity .Managed by Metroplex, Inc. 684-540032—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983ski/beach trips. Earn FREE TRIPS & commissions. SUN & SKI ADVENTURES: (312)871-1070.Babysitter tor intant in Hyde Park home 40hr/wk. Exp. Nec. 288-1198.Responsible couple/person needed 1 weekendper month (occasionally longer) to care for 11and 14 yr. car pref non-smoking nice kids goodpay 947-8348 evenings.Warm, enthusiastic, mature, responsible, bi¬lingual young woman for exceptionally verbal,loving 4-year old girl Monday afternoons.Prefer someone who plays an instrumentand/or has a great interest in science andmedicine. Call 642-2445.Juniors and seniors: earn course credit whilegaining valuable experience by assisting infascinating research on right-left brain func¬tion. Call 962-8846, M-F, 9-5.Boys needed for study on reading. If you areleft-handed and in 4th, 5th, or 6th grade, or ifyou are right-handed in 7th grade, please call962-8846, 9-5, M-F.Earn S500 or more each school year. Flexiblehours. Monthly payment for placing posters oncampus. Bonus based on results. Prizes award¬ed as well. 800-526-0883.Responsible babysitter for 3 year old, in ourhome close to campus. 684-5717.Parttime babysitter for 7 year old boy afterschool 2:30-5:30 M-TH salary neg. Call 955-7863.BABYSITTER NEEDED: School age kids-afternoons on campus-call 241-7545 after 6 pm.Experienced salesperson to sell embroideredsilk robes from Singapore. For further in¬formation, call Treasures of Pasa Pan Jan 649-9719.Receptionist for Hyde Park Dental Office.Part-time, some afternoons & Saturdays. Gradstudent only. Call 493-2222.Person needed as regular Friday substitute inmy child care home for 2-4 year olds. Can bringchild. 493-8195.University Church naeds child care wgrkers. 2hrs Sun am $4/hr Lv Ellen message. 363-8142.Clerical Help needej. 1 or 2 afternons per wk.Filing, some typing. Well-organized grad stu¬dent preferred. 4.74 per hr 667-4220 eves.Wanted Statistics Tutor Qualitative 1’iquiryFee Negotiable 493-2844 962-7875.Responsible, caring student or student spouseto provide childcare for our twr school agedaughters, early mornings and l',te afternoons1 15 hrs/wk. Good salary and partial board.Convenient Hyde Park locatic i. 643-5307 or 399-2411 or 567-3474.STUDENT MANUSCRIPT TYPIST. At least 55WPM. Able to type als' in Spanish. Bilingualpreferred, will be trained to type cameraready copy on IBM C jmposers. Part time 12-15hours/week. Pay on University scale. ContactGeorge Rumsey, Community & Family StudyCenter. 753-2974.Substitute Teachers needed all academicareas n-12 grade send resume and letter toDirector Box M 1362 E. 59th St.Nonsmokers who have mild asthma needed aspaid volunteers for respiratory research. CallDr. Griffith, 935-9784, leave message.Assistant camp director. Part-time; yearround. Co-ed summer camp and year-roundconference center; minimum 5 years' campexperience; BA required; strong Jewish background; Program Director during sum¬mer; develop weekend use of facility; weekendcoverage, if necessary; administrative duties.Excellent salary and benefits. For informationcontact B'nai B'rith Beber Camp at (312) 675-1130.Full and part-time positions for : instructors ofEnglish and other languages, especiallyJapanese, translators and interpreters. Pleasesend a letter and/or resume to: Linda, Trans-Lingual Communications, Inc., 8 SouthMichigan, Suite 1200, Chicago, IL 60603Independent programmer with an interest inartificial intelligence and natural languageprocessing. Helpful to have a workingknowledge of LISP. Call Andrew at Trans-Lingual Communications, 332-6555.General Office; Full and part-time positions ininternational communications firm. Also need¬ed: skilled word-processor operators andtypists. Please write to: Linda, Trans-LingualCommunications, Inc., 8 South Michigan, Suite1200, Chicago, IL 60603.People needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962-8859.Proficient female soccer player (collegestudents only, please) to work as assistant ingrade school soccer program. 4 hrs/week, sixweeks. Leave name and number at 962-9555.ASST. SPORTS INFORMATION PERSONTo work for director of athletics in reporting,writing releases, and assuming game dayresponsibislities at varsity athletic events.Time Commitment involved.MEN'S VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM MANAGERMale needed to assist coaches in organizationof varsity basketball team. Duties are variedperson MUST travel with to ALL away con¬tests - if interested in either of the above positions contact: Jim Harges Heimer at BartlettGym 1 lam to 3pm M-F or call 962-7681.DEPENDABLE DRUMMER NEEDED for Uof C Blues Band one evening per week. InfoNick 493-4651 David 947 9309 Stuart 241-6981.LOVING BABYSITTER for 2 year old T&Th8:30am 10:00am in my home on campus 324-1107.BABYSITTER NEEDED for 5 month old child.On campus location. Tues. 12-5 and/or Thurs10 3 $3.00 - 3.25 per hour. Call 753-3520. *RETIRED LADY PROF WILL PAY $400/moto 1 or 2 U of C female students. Duties: pur¬chase food weekly, cook simple, deliciousmeals, and do light housekeeping in studio apt.at 55th St. and Lake Shore Dr. Hours flexible.Referencesexchanged. Please phone 955-6728.Professor, Wife seek After-school Companionfor son, age 5. M-F 2-5.955-3623, 79 pm.Want to enrich youricollege life? Why notVOLUNTEER? Come by the Blue Gargoyle'sVolunteer Bureau for information on tutoring,advocacy or any of a range of volunteer opportunities. Call 955-4108.Pt time security guard position avail immed.Study at work, $4 hr. Prefer if applicant canalso be avail, during holidays (Xmas, etc.) 7526114; ask for Brian or leave name, number.Recording for the Blind welcomes you back!Training sessions for new volunteers beginnow For an appointment call: 288 7077, orcome to Hinds, 59b, 5734 Ellis.Single parent, working mother needs a warmand interested child care person for 7 y.o.Varied hours. 947-0847 P.M. SERVICESJUDITH TYPES - and has a memory. Phone955-4417.JAMES BONE, editor-typist, 363-0522.MOVING 8. HAULING. Discount Prices.Free—Packing Service. Free—Estimates.Free—Packing boxes & crates delivered. N/C.Free—Padding & dollies. References. Call Bill493 9122.TYPING by Experienced Secretary. Thesis,Manuscripts, Tables, etc. Grammar Cor¬rected. 667-8657.WANT HUBERT? Yes! CALL JUDITH. Phone955 4417.Typing. Term papers, these, etc. IBM Correc¬ting Selectric. All Projects welcome. 791-1674.Attn. International Students. We specialize inpersonal ettects and all household moves. Save10-30% on airfreight worldwide. Details callBDG INT'L. 312-593-7340.ROBERT’S PAINTING AND DECORATINGInterior and Exterior - Meticulous - Insured -Quality Guaranteed - Free Estimates - HydePark resident. 684-5717.PROF. TYPIST-EDITOR, GOOD PRICES 677-7895.Now serving FALAFEL with hummus. Blue Gargoyle Natural Foods Cateteria 5655 So.University M-F 11:00-2:00.COME TRY OUR FAMOUS EL BURRITTOSUPREMO - a tortilla filled with refried beans,two kinds of cheese, sour cream, black olives,green onion, tomatoes and sprouts! BLUEGARGOYLE NATURAL FOODSCAFETERIA. 5655 So. University M-F 112.Piano lessons. Russian concert pianist. Len¬ingrad Conservatory Masters degree Creativeapproach 288-0981 Jania.LARRY'S MOVING SERVICE. Only S15/hourtor van and labor. Free cartons, padding 667-8327.Music lessons Guitar, Classic, Folk, Isrealiand South American music-Recorder-Harmony-Counter-point-Ear training Call:684 8024.TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152Dependable woman available for full or parttime child care and light housekeeping in yourhome. Fluent in French. Experienced, Ex¬cellent References from UofC Prof. Mrs.Bristol. 768-4932.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Reasonable 6846882.PASSPORT photos while you wait. On Cam¬pus. Other photo services available. 962-6263.WELCOME TO CHICAGOWELCOME TO HYDE PARKWELCOME TOTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBUT MOST OF ALL -WELCOME TO “JIMMY'S"YOUR ON-CAMPUSPHOTO HEADQUARTERSSales - Repair - Service• Rentals by day-week-month:Cameras, projectors, screens, recorders(w/valid U. of C. I.D. only)• Prompt quality photo processing by Kodakand other discount processorsBatteries - Darkroom accessories - Cassette Tapes -Film - Video Tapes - Chemicals and Papers - RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962-7558 * l.B.X. 5-4364PART TIMETELEMARKETING PROGRAMLooking for a Unique Part-time WorkExperience This Fall?The American Bar Association is looking for peopleto contact its members nationwide by phone todiscuss the public service, education andmembership programs of the Association.If you possess good speaking abilities and canmake a positive impression over the phone, youmay qualify for one of these positions.The salary will be $4.50 per hour. The hourswill be 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.,Mondays thru Thursdays.To apply contact Cynthia Baniak, between1 p.m. and 5 p.m. 947-3956 STUDENTS FOR ISRAELFirst Meeting: Sunday, Oct. 2,12:15 p.m.(During bagel for brunch)come, speak your mindand help decide what directionthe group will take this year.Hillel House 5715 S. WoodlawnThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983—33Supportive Individualized Psychotherapy.Contact Dobbi Kerman M.A. Center torClinical and Educational Psychology. Aregistered Psychological Organization SlidingScale Insurance available 667-4176. 664-6650.SCENESFOCUSING is a method tor exploring & work¬ing on feelings developed by Eugene Gendlin.Group meet Tues eves Downtown. Call Hannh924 5057The First Congressional Nuclear WeaponsFreeze Group sponsoring a local Walkathon inconjunction with walks throughout the UnitedStates on October 1. Walkers and sponsorsneeded to raise funds to help end the armsrace. Registration at 10AM 4840 S. Dorchester.Call 667-1409 or 324-4764.Ongoing Women's Therapy Group Ages 33-45.Saturday. Screening Interview Required N/C.Sliding Scale. Mary Hallowitz CSW ACSU 947-0154.HYDE PARK ARTISANS Seasonal OpeningWearable art by Ester Beverwyk and DanaEaster Plus Batik Pottery Paintings Jewelryand More? New Hours Thur. 12-4 Fri. 12-4 Sat12-4 Sun 12-4. 57th and Woodlawn in theUnitarian Church.October 7 Asian Christian Fellowship Welcom¬ing Party 6:30 pm Dinner. AugustanaLutheran Church. 5500 S. Woodlawn. EveryoneWelcome.WRITE RS' WOR KSHOP 752 8377LIVE JAZZ & lunch at the Blue Gargoyle. Fri¬day noon Sept. 30th. Serving pizza, salads,soups, baked goods, sodas, and much more!5655 So. University 11:00am till 2:00pm, M-F.Hyde Park KAYPRO USER GROUP: Firstmeeting Thurs., Oct. 5 at 7:00 pm at Value Add¬ed Systems, Del Prado Mezzanine, 1701 E. 53rdSt. Phone 667-4440.HISPANIC CULTURAL SOCIETYAll Hispanic Cultural Society Members are in¬vited to the Entering Hispanic Student DinnerSat Oct 1 at 6:30PM Activities planned for Yrat 2nd floor East Lounge in Ida Noyes Hall.FREE SWIMMING INSTRUCTION FORADULTS: Ida Noyes Hall — 7:30 p.m. - 8:30p.m. Begins October 4,1983.Try the Game of Life on your KAYPRO com¬puter's spreadsheet program, (see page 28 ofthe October Scientific American). JAMNASTICSEXERCISE CLASSES EVERYTUES8.THURS 5:15pm Sat. 10:30am starts* 10/4 call 962 9554 or come to Rm 210 to register.An Eclectic Ed Program.VEGETARIAN COOKINGCLASSESON TUES 5:30pm $35 starts 10/11 TOREGISTER COME TO RM 210 IDA NOYES orcall 962-9554. An Eclectic Ed Program.JAZZ DANCECLASSES EVERY WED&FRI 5:30pm 8.6:30pm S35 STARTS 10/13 TO REGISTERCOME TO RM 210 IDA NOYES or call 962 9554.An Eclectic Ed Program.HARAAONICA CLASSESLEARN TO PLAY "BLUES HARP" $20 forschedules & to register come to Rm 210 IdaNoyes or call 962-9554. An Eclectic Ed Pro¬gram.BELLY DANCINGCLASSES on Tues 5:15pm starts 10/11 S15 call962-9554 or come to Rm 210 Ida Noyes toregister. An Eclectic Ed Program.BALLROOM DANCEClasses on Mon 6pm 7:30pm & 9pm starts 10/10$25 call 962-9554 or come to Rm 210 Ida Noyes toregister. An Eclectic Ed Program.AFRICAN DANCECLASS EVERY MON&WED 6:30pm $25 starts10/10 call 962 9554 or come to Rm 210 Ida Noyesto register. An Eclectic Ed Program.AEROBIC DANCECLASSES EVERY MON&WED 5:15pm only$25-35 starts 10/3 call 962-9554 or come to Rm210 Ida Noyes. AN ECLECTIC ED PROGRAM.DOLLMAKING CLASSLEARN TO CRAFT DOLLS Wed. 7pm classesstart 10/12 $30 call 962-9554 or regiuter in Rm210 IDA NOYES. An Eclectic Ed Program.ACHTUNG!TAKE APRIL WILSON'S GERMAN COURSETHIS FALL AND HIGH PASS THE WINTERLANGUAGE EXAM! The 15 week course willbegin Oct. 3. Two sections-MWF 12-1 8i 6-7. ForpegentsparkIN HYDE PARK ON THE LAKETHE BEST IN LUXURIOUS CITY LIVINGKEEPS GETTING BETTER!!In a community known the world over forartistic and intellectual achievements,REGENTS PARK stands out from all otherrental residences for amenities, service andaffordable rents.MODEL OPEN DAILY 288-5050Nine minutes to LoopShuttle bus at door toUniversity of Chicago &Michael Reese Hospital24 hour doorman/securitymaintenance/conciergeConvenient shopping inour Market-in-the-ParkMarinas nearbyEnclosed supervisedgarageCarpeting/DishwasherCleaner/Valet ServiceCable TV 24-hour moviesHealth ClubFabulous private roof-topgardenExpress bus at door toLoop5050-5020 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60615ByThe Clinton Company IFIEDS Usmore information and to register, call AprilWilson: 667-3038.DOES YOUR MINDMATTER?It does to us. Right and left handed peopleneeded for paid participation in studies onright-left brain function. Call 962 8846 9 5 M-F.FICTION WRITINGExp. novelist/teacher offering intensivecourses. Unique method. (1) Beginners: Wed.7 pm (2) Inter.: Sat. noon. (3) Advanced: byappt. (4) Gothics, Romance, Thrillers: Mon.7pm. Chicago Campus. Daniels 667-0673JAZZ GUITAR6 week session starts soon. $35 FOR CLASSSCHEDULE come to Rm 210 Ida Noyes or call962-9554. An Eclectic Ed Program.IRISH MUSICLEARN TO PLAY IRISH WHISTLE. Classeson Thurs 7pm $20 TO REGISTER COME TORM 210 IDA NOYES or call 962-9554. An Eclectic Ed Program.WORD PROCESSORXerox 800 Electronic Mag Card typewriterstores 8i retrieves data, full editing features,daisy wheel printer. Cost $2000 includestypewriter, mag card system and sound shiel-ed. Call D. Williams, 962-1623 at U. of C., 8:30-5:00.BEGINNING AEROBICSIntroductory level classes 6:30pm Tuesdays 8$Thursdays $15-6 sessions $25-12 sessions. Forinfo call 962-9554. An Eclectic Ed Program. DANCETERICAis available to make your next party a Successfor less! $99 includes sound system and lights.Call 241-6483 for referenced or more inf.BUFFETDINNERSEnjoy good food and company at Crossroads6pm Saturday October 1. 5621 S. Btackstone.$3.00DUMBRAneeds a LEAD GUITARIST CALL 493 4931U. OF C. STUDENTWhy rent when you can own 2br-2ba for $500mo? Top Sec. High Rise 3 blks. frov campus.Panaview of city w pool healtp club indoor pkg.Barbara 642-5240 951 0066RUMMAGE SALESaturday, October , From 9 to $. Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club 5480 S. Kenwood.WANTEDWanted RacquetballiEnthusiasts Women A.Men C or D players 493-3844 962-7875.RIDESGoing to NYC w/small truck 10/8-10/9. Riderwanted to share driving etc. Call 962-9554 8$leave name 8< number.UC CAMPUS HOTLINEWhether you need information or need to talkwith someone who cares, we're there to help.Call the UC Hotline, 753-1777 7pm to 7am 7 daysa week.CanonJDXM,PROGRAMProgrammed AutomationPlus Shutter-PrioritySophistication.System Integration • PROGRAMMED AUTOMATION-just focus and shoot!• SHUTTER/PRIORITYAUTOMATION• Fully automatic flash photogra¬phy with optional Speedlite 188A• New split/micropnsm laser-matteanti-blackout viewfinder screenstandard-1 5X brighter• Total of 8 user-interchangeablefocusing screens (optional)• Optional Power Winder A2, Aand Motor Drive MA available forrapid sequence shooting• LED readout in viewfinder• Manual mode for creativephotography• Lightweight, compact and easyto use• Accepts more than 50 Canonwide-angle, telephoto andzoom lensesSpeedlite 188A andPower Winder A2 shown optional$000.00The University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. • 2nd Floor962-7558 • I.B.X. 5-4364NOW AT COPYWORKS E62DLNDINSTANT CASSETTECOPYING SERVICEFAST 30, 60. 90 or 120 MINUTES TAPES. COPY A ONE HOURCASSETTE IN LESS THAN 2 MINUTES.INEXPENSIVE OUR REMARKABLY LOW COST INCLUDES A COPYCASSETTE, AND SERVICE.MIRROR PERFECT YOU'LL GET GUARANTEED PERFECTMONAURAL COPIES OR YOUR MONEY BACK.What can you copy? Just about anything including:lectures, seminars, languages, labs, meetings, college classes,sermons, sales messages, weddings, interviews, talking letters,word processing data, and computer programs.Come in for our $1.00 OFF Introductory CouponCOPYWORKS, LtdThe Copy Center in Harper Court288-2233st. grzegony of nyssalutherzan paRi'sfaat the university of ChicagoSundays at 10:00 a.m.In the Cloisters5757 S. University Ave.34—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983PUBLICLECTURE''SERIESSponsored by the ENRICO FERMI IN¬STITUTE. THE AURTHUR H. COMPTONLECTURES. Eighteenth Series by Lee Lind-blom, The Enrico Fermi Institute. SaturdaysOctober 1 through December 10. White Swarfs,Neutron Stars and Black Holes. First Lecture:Are Stars Forever? Sat. Oct. 1 at 11 AM.Eckhart Hall, Room 133, 1118 E. 58th St. For in¬formation, 962-7823.OBSMEET1NGThere will be a meeting of the Organization ofBlack Students at 7:00pm, Wed. Oct, 5 on thethird floor of Ida Noyes Hall.LES BEAUX PARLEURSL'association francaise de I'universite va sereunir samedi a 20 heures, a Phi Delt, 5625University. Reunion Organisatrice. L'art apreparer le croissant. Biennenu a tous. t.George Woodbury 643-5449AN OLD-FASHIONEDMORNING NURSERYSCHOOL...A few openings available for four-year-olds atHyde Park Union Church Nursery School. Forinformation call 363-6036, Jane Katch, Director5600 S. Woodlawn Ave. Chicago, 60637.WALK FOR THE FREEZE10 K Walkathon for the NUCLEAR FREEZEon Sat. Oct 1. at 11:00 AM One of 240neighborhood walks for the Freeze throughoutthe USA. Get your friends to pledge 50‘ or $1 forevery kilometer you walk. Money goes to theNational Freeze Campaign. Start off point isthe Shiloh Baptist Church 4840 S. Dorchester.We walk together around Hyde Park andreturn for rally and refreshments. For info:667-1409.WEDDINGSHyde Park's newest photography studio is cur¬rently booking October & November weddings.The Better Image Studio 1344 E. 55th St. 643-6262 (by appointment only).GAY? LESBIAN?GALA will hold a cgffeehouse Tues Oct 4 at9pm at 5446 S Kimbark. This is the firstmeeting of the year and all are welcome. Comesee old friends and meet new people in a warmunpressured setting.LANGUAGE COURSESThe CHICAGO CLUSTER of THEOLOGICALSCHOOLS at the LUTHERAN SCHOOL ofTHEOLOGY offers professional instruction byexperienced teachers and/or native speakersin FRENCH/GERMAN/LATIN/SPANISH.See below for specifics or call CCTS 493-6637 orProgram co-ord. GF Miller 363-1384.YOGAA Perfect Balance to the Life of the MindBeginning Mon. Oct. 17th 5527 S. DorchesterHatha Postures, Breath Training, Meditation,Relaxation, Classes now forming on campus.Taught by Dobbi Kerman. To pre-register 667-4176, 664 6650.FRENCH CLASSESthrough CCTS at LSTC. READING COURSE:Tue 7:30-9:30; Rm 203; Beg. Oct 4. FEE: $110.For info and reg call Mary-Louise Holman-Bekkouche 677-2312 or 962-1722 or CCTS 4936637.GERMAN COURSETHROUGH CCTS at LSTC. All classes meet inRm 206. READING COURSES: I. TWO-QUARTER COURSE: Mon 7:30-9:30pm; Beg.Oct, FEE: $110; II ADVANCED READINGWed. 7:30-9:30, Beg. Oct 5; FEE: $110; III 15WEEK INTENSIVE: Sat. 9-1; BEG. Oct, 83.FEE: $220. CONVERSATIONAL GERMAN:BEGINNERS: Th 7:30 9:30 Beg. Oct 6; IN¬TERMEDIATE: Tue. 7:30 9:30 or to be arr.FEE: $110. For info and reg call Gerlinde F.Miller, PhD: native speaker 363-1384 or CCTS493-6637.LATIN COURSEthrough CCTS. Study classical or medievalLatin. For info and reg call Father RichardZboroski 324-2626 or CCTS 493 6637.SPANISH COURSESthrough CCTS at LSTC. BEGINNINGSPANISH TU 6 8. Rm 205, beg Oct 4; FEE:$110. INTERMEDIATE COURSE to be arr.For info and reg call Carmen Rosario 288 8289or 241-7800 or CCTS 493 6637. CLASSIFIEDSFOLKDANCINGLearn to tell your left foot from your right do¬ing dances from around the world (MiddleEast, Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, andmore) with UC Folkdancers. Mondays (begin¬ning 8> intermediate level) and Sundays(general level) in Ida Noyes Hall. Instruction8pm to 9:30, request dancing 9:30 to 11:30.OUTING CLUBImportant organizational meeting Tuesday,October 4, 7:30 PM, Ida Noyes East Lounge.Please attend.RACERS, RUN'RS/ JOG'RSRun the CARDIACTION CLASSIC this Sunday,Oct 2 9:00am-Start 8. Finish on 93rd SI nearYales (2300 East) S. Chicago YMCA & S.Chicago Comm Hospital sponsor this 10K race(8.5K Fun Run) Registration: 7:$0-8:45am -$7.00iFee includes a Nifty drk. Blue ShoulderTote Bag-Trophies 8 Age Divisions - Runner'sClinic After Race.KISS ME, KATETry-outs for this show will be Sun., Oct. 2 10amto 4pm, 1st fir Reynolds Club Theatre, Mon.,Oct. 3,6 to 10 in the Ida Noyes Library.CHESS FOR EVERYONEAbsolute beginners and all other chess playerswelcome. Chess Club, Ida Noyes, Mondays,7pm. Games, lessons, beginners instruction.THE SUNDAY BRUNCHIS BACKWe have bagles, lox, creme cheese, coffee, andorange juice. Come and read the Sunday NewYork times and Tribune. Sandwiches are only$1.75 - The best price around. We open 11:00 amevery Sunday at 5715 Woodlawn (Hillel House).KUNDALINI YOGAClass meets Tues, Thurs. & Fri 5-6:30 IdaNoyes East Lounge First Class Oct. 4 $30 for 9classes.AUDITIONSFor the Blackfriars fall production: Kiss Me,Kate, Sun, Oct. 2, 10 to 4 in Reynolds Club 1stfir theatre and Mon, Oct 3, 6-lpm, Ida NoyesLibrary, bring a song if you can.Need a GuaranteedStudent Loan?Graduate Loans:Up to $5,0000Undergraduate Loans:Up to $2,500The First NationalBank of ChicagoColl Us At 732-4530/4539 or Contact Mimi Race732-0823©FIRST CHICAGOThe First National Bank ot ChicagoMerPa^U MRCisajasSEASONAL OPENINGWearable ArdrfyEstherfteS^rfif^Y^ andDal57tJycrh#4WQodlawnIntiUnitarian ChurchNew Hoursi Thurs. 12-4, Frl. 12-4Sot. 12-4. Sun. 12-4FINE HAND-CRAFTED ARTAT REASONABLE PRICES COMPUTERPROGRAMMERWANTED: EXPERIENCED 6502 programmer to debug assembly language program.MUST know dos 3.3 (Apple IT). Need fastresults. Excellent Pay. Call 753-3751 x231.GRADUATE INTERNPROGRAM-INFORMATIONMEETINGRegistered divisional graduate studentswelcome. Program places selected graduatestudents in part-time jobs. Meeting will featurecurrent grad student interns. Good opportunityto learn about the Program and to sign on.Please come for conversation, questions andrefreshments. Tuesday, October 4, from 4-5:30pm, in the Reynolds Club, Room 201.SIGNUP FOR YOUR FREECOMPUTER ACCOUNTAll registered students, Hospital interns andresidents, and faculty of the University ofChicago are automatically entitled to PersonalComputing Accounts with the ComputationCenter. To use these accounts and work on theCenter's computers you need to obtain aPERSON-ID and Personal Computing Account(CA) (in order to use the Center's DEC-20 andMVS computers) at two locations: the USITEbusiness office (Wieboldt 310), from 9:00 a.m.to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday and at theMain business office, 1313 D. 60th (Merriam164), 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday throughFriday. Remember to bring your current validUniversity ID card with you. Each student, in¬tern or resident PCA is worth $100 in computerfunds for the academic year, while each facul¬ty PCA is worth $300. FREE CLASSES FORAUTUMN QUARTERThe computation Center is once again offeringa series of free non-credit seminars and lowcost non-credit courses on computing topics forthe University community during autumnquarter. These classes begin on October 5 andcontinue through the end gf November.A free schedule of these seminars and coursesis available from the Center at the followinglocations: Usite Business Office (Wieboldt310), from 10:30 to 2:00, Monday - Friday;Main Business Office (Merriam 164, 1313 E.60th), from 8:30 to 4:30, Monday-Friday.Copies of the schedule may also be obtainedfrom the Social Science Advisor in Pick 123, theProgram Advisor at Usite and the TerminalAttendant at Usite.The seminars include introductions to the MVSoperating system and the ACF2 securitypackage on the IBM 3081 computer, a seminaron the fundamentals of computing, a seminaron microcomputing and microcomputers, aseminar on text processing and formatting(including how to format dissertations using acomputer), a course on the MUSE word pro¬cessing system on the DECSYSTEM-20 com¬puters, courses on the FORTRAN programm¬ing language and the SPSSX statisticalpackage as well as other introductory topics.If you have questions about the classes offered(e g. content and intended audience) contactthe Center's Educational Coordinator, DonCrabb, at 962-7173 or via DEC-20 MM toSTAFF.DONCRABBFREE GUIDED TOURS OFTHE COMPUTATIONCENTER USITEFACILITYHIGH BLOOD PRESSURE90% of persons on Bp medication in the Menn-inger Foundations Bio-Behavioral TreatmentOE Essential Hypertension become normoten-sive while eliminating medication through Biofeedback and autogenic training. The Centerfor Clinical and Educational Psychology is nowforming treatment groups and sponsoring aclinical study at 50% of Menninger cost. In¬surance available. Contact Dobbi Kerman 667-4176 664 6650.COMPUTATION CENTER Please join us on one of our daily tours of theUsite Central Computer User's Site Facility inWieboldt 310. These tours take approximately45 minutes and are held Mondays andTuesdays at noon and Wednesdays andThursdays at 4:30 p.m. The tours begin at theterminal attendant's desk in Usite. You'll learnhow to use the computer documentation equip¬ment available at the facility. These toursbegin September 26 and run according to theabove schedule through October 13. Instruc¬tors can arrange additional tours for theirclasses by contacting Ed Donner at 962-8188 orvia DEC-20 MM to STAFF. EDDONNER.f^Xar/oZ/ej &ea/ ^V 493-0666 • CALL ANYTIME? ISN’T THIS EXACTLYWHAT & WHERE ?56th Blackstone -sunshinybright -excellent condition in alarge 3 bedroom 2 bath.Especially nice bookspace &kitchen for gourmet cook.$89,500First Time OfferedMADISON PARKBEAUTYLooking for a house and cannotfind the space you need? Trythis—Big, BIG 4.000 squarefeet, nine-room condo. Onlythree owners in history. Withgarage. $142,500. TERRACE, SEA & SKYPRICE REDUCTION23rd floor overlooking Lake &city. Three bedroom in CornellVillage near 52nd & Cornell.Tip-top condo includes insideparking. $99,500. Will con¬sider a deferred closing for im¬mediate possession.ESTATE LIQUIDATION$25,000Garden apt.—4 rooms-condo.Campus location nr 56Blackstone. That's the totalprice for quick sale. CallMarie.IMAGINEONLY $50,000 for a CHOICEcorner 2 bedroom at 55th &DORCHESTER. SUPERAMENITIES! OUT-OF-STATE owner MUST SELL!SPECIAL PRICESPECIAL LOAN57TH & KENWOOD1 bedroom. 2 studies. Excellentcondition! 9% assumable. Priceis $52,000. (Below market.)MUST SELL!The Chicago Maroon—Friday. September 30. 1983—35-with DES DICKERSONbackup band for PRINCEOCTOBER 7,19838:00 p.m.MANDEL HALLTICKETS ON SALE AT THE REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICEMONDAY OCTOBER 3TICKET SALES RESERVED FOR STUDENTS ONLY MONDAYOCTOBER 3 AND TUESDAY OCTOBER 4TICKET SALES FOR NON-STUDENTS WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 5$5 Students w/UC Student I.D.$7 All othersLIMIT: 2 TICKETS PER IDFOR INFORMATION CALL: 962-730036—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, September 30, 1983