mm ■/ •"! ''I'"-1) ■■■■;,■ ,The Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 12 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, October 14, 1983Profs see Olin Foundation as asset hereBy Jeff Wolfand Jeff TaylorThe John M. Olin Foundationhas donated $1.1 million to theUniversity of Chicago to estab¬lish the Olin Center for theTheory and Practice of De¬mocracy.Nathan TarcovLargely a result of the ener¬getic efforts of professorsNathan Tarcov and AllanBloom, the Center will be con¬cerned primarily with gradu¬ate instruction in politicalscience. The Center’s purpose,according to Bloom, is “tostudy classical texts and poli¬cial theory as a means ofenriching public life.”University Provost RalphNicholas said the Center is“one of the best things that hashappened at the Universitythis year.” Tarcov noted thatplans for the Center “are inline with the whole Baker Com¬mission Report (on graduateeducation) to offer a non-cred¬it, interdisciplinary source ofsupport for graduate studies.We want to provide an intellec¬tually inspiring and excitingfocus for people and theirwork.”Main activities will includeseminars and other means ofsupplementing private re¬search. The inaugural semi¬nar, a contemporary examina¬tion of Alexis de Tocqeville’sDemocracy in America, willbe attended by author SaulBellow, George F. Will of the Washington Post and MichaelWalzer of the New Republic.According to Tarcov, “wewanted to pick people whoshared in different ways ourinterest in bringing to classicalpolitical texts some focus onthe issues of today.” ColumnistWill, Tarcov said, has “a spe¬cial interest in both de Tocque-ville and Edmund Burke andMalzer in Jean-Jacques Rous¬seau and Thomas Hobbes.”Two fellowships of $8000 plustuition will be awarded annual¬ly through the Olin Center toqualified graduate studentswho participate in the semi¬nars. The money is to be usedfor research on topics relatedto democratic institutions.Tarcov said the Center “isnot meant to be just anotherpolicy-oriented think tank, buta home for inquiry into thepractical problems and policydilemmas of contemporary de¬mocracy on the basis of theo¬retical reflection.” He notedthat a primary focus is to in¬vite those actively involved inthe political process, “becausetheory is more vital and inter¬esting if you attempt to makesome link to practice.”In addition to funding theCenter, the John M. Olin Foun¬dation currently sponsors anumber of programs in theLaw School and the Depart¬ment of Economics, and politi¬cal programs nationwide. Es¬sentially a conservativeorganization, the Olin Founda¬tion supports purely education¬al endeavors like the new Center at U of C. Olin spokes¬man Michael Joyce said “TheFoundation is conservativeonly in the sense that it is de¬voted to particular Americantraditions.”Many remember the OlinFoundation for its endowmentof a lecture series at BrownUniversity that was protestedby some students there as par¬tisan. Speakers in the series in¬cluded Sam Huntington, CIADirector William Casey,former CIA Director Stans- field Turner and George Will.But Tarcov said this was “ir¬relevant” to the Foundation’sendowment of the new OlinCenter here. Bloom added“The Olin Foundation is a con¬servative one, but their inter¬est in this case is to support acompletely independent centerwhich will examine the prob¬lems of free institutions.”Other scheduled activitiesfor the Center include a confer*ence in June to considerwhether nuclear weapons have changed the nature of politics,and a conference the followingfall on “the role of the writer inthe West and in the East,”.Senior Fellows of the Center,drawn from the University’sfaculty, include Saul Bellow,Joseph Cropsey, J. DavidGreenstone, Leon Kass, Les-zek Kolakowski. Philip Kur¬land, Ralph Lerner, EdwardLevi, John Mearsheimer, A.K.Ramanujan and Paul Wrheat-iy.Ex-chief of staff to visit campusBy Cliff GrammichGeneral David C. Jones,former chairman of the De¬partment of Defense JoinChiefs of Staff, will visit theUniversity as a Visiting Fel¬low. While here, Jones will lec¬ture Monday at 3:30p.m. in So¬cial Sciences 122 on nationalsecurity predicaments. Joneswill answer questions follow¬ing this public lecture.Jones was first appointedchairman of the Joint Chiefs ofStaff in 1978, and was reap¬pointed to a second two-yearterm in 1980. Jones servedeight years on the Joint Chiefsof Staff, the last four as chair¬man.Jones’s domestic and over¬seas assignments have includ¬ed operational, staff, and com¬mand positions in strategic,tactical, training, and Alliedorganizations. He is a com¬mand pilot.In 1969, Jones served in theRepublic of Vietnam as deputy commander for operations andthen as vice commander of theSeventh Air Force.Jones has had extensive ex¬perience in dealing with lead¬ers of many nations throughhis work with NATO. Jonesserved as commander of theUS Air Force in Europe, whileconcurrently acting as com¬mander of the Fourth AlliedTactical Air Forces. Jones hasalso worked on mutual securi¬ty problems with Middle East¬ern and Southwest Asian na¬tions.Jones was born in Aberdeen,South Dakota in 1921. He gra¬duated from high school inMinot, North Dakota and at¬tended the University of NorthDakota and Minot State Col¬lege prior to the outbreak ofWorld War II. He volunteeredfor the Army Air Corps in Jan¬uary, 1942, and received hiscommission and pilot wings inFebruary, 1943. A graduate ofthe National War College, Jones has received honorarydoctorate degrees from theUniversitv of Nebraska atGen. David JonesOmaha, Louisiana Tech Uni¬versity, Minot State College,and Boston University.continued on page eightSchmidt lectures on international issuesBy Peter OsterlundCharging that members ofthe Atlantic alliance “moreand more have unilateral deci¬sions and actions by the Amer¬icans” forced upon them,former West German Chancel¬lor Helmut Schmidt told apacked Mandel Hall Mondaythat it was time for “renewedevaluation of Western grandstrategy” towards the SovietUnion and its allies.“Its economic strength aswell as its military and politi¬ cal power in the present mo¬ment of history predestinatesthe United States to lead,”Schmidt, the 1983 Albert Pick,Jr., lecturer on internationalissues, said. “That leadershipamong free and sovereign na¬tions cannot consist of ordersand instructions,” he added.“But it must be based on dis¬cussion and consensus. It mustbe based on give and take.”In the course of his one-hour,twenty-minute talk entitled“Problems with a Grand Strat-Computers: new and improvedBy Hilary TillThe following article onchanges and improvements inthe University’s ComputationCenter is the first of a four-partseries on computing at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. The re-U-site maining articles will appear insucceeding Maroons everyFriday for the next threeweeks. The second part coversthe current problems with theUniversity’s computing sys¬tems; the third part reportsthe services provided by theComputation Center; and theconcluding article describesthe University’s new computerscience department.In an effort to enhance thecapabilities of the computingfacilities available at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, the Compu¬tation* Center has broughtabout numerous changes andimprovements. There are stillseveral problems with the Uni¬versity’s computer systems,but most of them are eithertemporary or unavoidable.This topic will be covered inthe next article of the four-partseries on U of C computing.Many of the more annoyingproblems of the past have beenat least partially resolved.Four of the past problemsoften cited are the following:•The DECsystem 2060 com¬puter’s Central Processing Unit (CPU) capacity was notlarge enough for the volume ofstudents who used the DEC.(The CPU is the “part of acomputer system thatoperates on data.”) For the in¬dividual user, the limited CPUcapacity often meant loginqueues and slower computerresponse time when the sys¬tem was at capacity. (TheDEC-20 computer is mainlyused by students, faculty, andstaff for running interactivesystem programs.)•The Amdahl computer wasbecoming saturated with de¬mands. The job executionqueues of the Amdahl werelengthening substantially. Thismeant that the amount of timeit took for a batch job to be exe¬cuted on the Amdahl was be¬coming longer and longer.(The Amdahl computer wasmainly used for running back¬ground programs in a batchenvironment. Basically inbatch computing, the com¬puter decides when a programis to executed after it is given alist ot instructions.)continued on page eight egy in Dealing with the SovietUnion,” Schmidt told thestanding-room only crowd that“if America fails in leader¬ship, there will be nobody elseto take it up” and warned that“leadership can be dissipatedby loose talk and hasty action— one can lose leadership veryeasily.”“The military strategy of thealliance has come under grow¬ing and severe doubt, which isbound to detract from its credi¬bility and its deterrence value,and this is where we have tomend our fences,” observingthat in the face of unified Sovi¬et pressure it was necessaryfor the allies to be of an agree¬ment in offering a counter¬force.In an attempt to counter per¬ceived „ Soviet aggression,Schmidt cautioned against giv¬ing the Europeans “the mis¬taken impression that Ameri¬ca wants to put the squeeze onthe Soviet Union and other communist states. We Europe¬ans know that this is not poss¬ible. We know the Russian ca¬pacity for suffering and weknow the readiness of commu¬nist dictatorships to call ontheir people’s capacity to suf¬fer.”To the apparent amusementof parts of the audience,Schmidt added his personalopinion that the travails oftheir history had given theRussian people a “passion forsuffering.”Schmidt rejected the notionsthat the Soviets have any sig¬nificant military advantageover the West. “Both sideshave a multiplicity of windowsof vulnerability in nuclear ar¬maments. The military equi¬librium has by no means de¬teriorated to our disadvantageover the last 15 years. That’s awrong story that has beenprinted over and over in theUnited States.”continued on page eightgrey city journalU of C's( < dopey" pastcoverInsideMaroonWHPKpage 12to fly Out we can teach you how to READ MORE, READFASTER, and READ WITH GREATER UNDERSTANDING.We mean that LITERALLYOver ONE MILLION PEOPLE have used Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics and have dramatically TRIPLED THEIRREADING SPEED I They've just as dramatically improved theirCONCENTRATION, COMPREHENSION and RETENTION IWould you like to read Time or Newsweek in less than30 minutes? Read a novel in less than an hour? Read a dailynewspaper in a matter of minutes? Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics can give you this and MORE! As A Student: Cut your study time by two-thirds! In¬crease your recall, grade point average and your leisure time.In Business: Competition is fierce, whether in lookingfor a job or m keeping one Because of the accelerating paceof our society, the individual has an almost insurmountabletask to remain abreast in a specific business or professionpromotion possiblePlan to attend a free Speed Reading Lesson and find outfor yourself that if is possible to read 3, 4, yes, even 5 timesfaster, with better comprehension! Make that move TODAYfrom an ordinary reader to an Evelyn Wood Super Reader IJrtereiiseyour reading speed as much as 100% on the spot!Saturday, October 15, 198310:00 AMHOLT ROOM Room 135Chicago Theological Seminary • 5757 S. UniversityEVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS■■* !*US Crump.cn-Meridian HospiceMeridian Hospice is sponsoring abenefit buffet and theater party Oc¬tober 23. Highlighted by the Jeff-nominated Court Theater presentationof Noel Coward’s Hay Fever at 7:30p.m., the benefit will convene with acocktail buffet from 5 to 7 p.m. at theSmart Gallery, 5550 S. Greenwood.Tickets are $25, and donations are tax-deductible.Meridian Hospice, 5455 S. Ingleside,is a volunteer community which helpsdying patients suffering from incur¬able disease with their emotional frus¬trations. The group provides volunteertraining and is in need of people to helpwith organizational as well as direct-care work. For information about thebenefit or other activities, call955-5529.Performances of the Chicago Reper¬tory Dance Ensemble, originally sche¬duled for Oct. 15 and 16 at KenwoodAcademy, have been postponed be¬cause of the strike by teachers againstChicago’s public schools. New datesfor the performances will be an¬nounced later. Tickets already sold forthe previously scheduled perfor¬mances will be honored at the laterdates. For further information, call327-7777.Symposium on stressThe University of Chicago MedicalCenter will hold a symposium on“Stress: Coping and Living With It”Nov. 1, at the Westin Hotel, 909 N. Mi¬chigan Ave., from 8:45 a.m. to 2:30p.m. The symposium will featurestress management specialists assem¬bled by the Board of Directors of Chi¬cago Lying-In Hospital.The moderator will be Dr. Jarl E.Dyrud, professor of psychiatry at theUniversity. Experts on the variouspanels will be Paul Camic and SusanWeitzman of the University of Chicago,Margaret Huyck of Illinois Institute of Technology, Phyllis Blumberg of RushPresbyterian St. Luke’s MedicalCenter, and Laurence Grimm, ChrisKeys, and David McKirnan of the Uni¬versity of Illinois-Chicago.Small group-sessions in the sympo¬sium will concentrate on stress relatedto divorce, working women, the Type-Apersonality, aging, parenting, alcoholand drugs.Tickets for the event, which includeslunch, are $30. For reservations ormore information, call Ginny Stigler at955-9186 or Anne Hamada at 667-4945.Blue Gargoyle TeaThe Blue Gargoyle Youth ServiceCenter, 5655 S. University Ave., willsponsor its 4th annual InternationalTea Sunday from 3 to 6 p.m. Six buffettables laden with food and drink nativeto six continents are the main attrac¬tion for guests who are invited to makea donation as they partake of the inter¬national cuisine. Everyone is welcometo attend the event, and there is no ad¬mission fee.A youth talent showcase will be heldin the sanctuary of University Churchat 5 p.m. There will be an ongoing chil¬dren’s program with clowns, musi¬cians, and a variety of entertainers inthe game room from 3:15 to 4:45.The International Tea culminatesthe Blue Gargoyle’s major fall fund¬raising activities. The proceeds sup¬port an extensive array of programsfrom the Hyde Park, Kenwood, andWoodlawn communities. For addition¬al information regarding the Tea orBlue Gargoyle programs, call955-4108.HP dance classesRegistration is now open for ChicagoRepertory Dance Ensemble classes tobe taught at the Hyde Park JewishCommunity Center. Six-week sessionsin beginning and intermediate ballet,modern and jazz dance classes foradults and teens, will begin the week ofNovember 1. Classes will be TuesdayPerformances delayed and Wednesday evenings and Thurs¬day and Friday mornings. For infor¬mation call Sonya Burns at 268-4600.Truman scholarshipThe office of the Dean of Students inthe College is seeking applicants for theHarry S. Truman Scholarship.The scholarship is intended to assiststudents who “have an outstanding po¬tential for leadership in any phase ofgovernment.” Each scholarship pro¬vides $5000 annually for the last twoyears of college and the first two yearsof graduate study.Applicants should be second-yearstudents in the College with a gradepoint average of at least 3.00 and a de¬monstrable interest in government orcommunity affairs. From the pool ofapplicants, the University may nomin¬ate two candidates to enter competi¬tions for the Truman Scholarship intheir home states.Students who are interested in apply¬ing and faculty members who wouldlike to nominate a student should con¬tact Suzanne Ivester in Harper 254,962-8622, by October 24. Individual in¬terviews will be scheduled for appli¬cants between October 24 and 28. Appli¬cants should be prepared to bring aninformal resume of their political in¬volvement to the interview. Humanities scholarsThe Institute for Humane Studies hasannounced it will award under-gradu¬ate fellowships up to $7500 and gradu¬ate fellowships up to $9000 under theClaude R. Lambe Fellowships Pro¬gram.Applicants fur the fellowships musthave at least junior standing by the1984 fall term, and should be studyingin the social sciences, law, the humani¬ties, or journalism, and must be pursu¬ing or intending to pursue graduatestudy in those fields. Applicants mustalso demonstr ite interest in classicalliberal/liberta' ian ideas, plan to pur¬sue an intellec ual career, and not haveany other full :ition scholarships forthe 1984-85 aca iemic year.For further information on theLambe Fellowships, write Walter E.Grinder, Vice-President for AcademicPrograms, Claude R. Lambe Fellow¬ship Program, Institute for HumaneStudies, P.O. Box 1149, Menlo Park,California, 94025. Application deadlineis January 15.SECC helipad hearingThe Chicago Plan Commission andthe South East Chicago Commissionwill hold hearings on the proposed heli¬port for the University of Chicago’sMedical Center’s helicopter ambu¬lance. The Chicago Plan Commissionwill consider the zoning regulations in¬volved at a 2 p.m. hearing in City Coun¬cil chambers, October 20. The CityCouncil meets at City Hall, 121 N. La¬Salle St.In addition, the South East ChicagoCommission will sponsor a meeting Oc¬tober 18, during which Dr. FrankBaker, the helicopter service directorand director of emergency medicine,will make a presentation to neighbor¬hood residents.THE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEPresentsGENERAL DAVID C. JONESFormer Chairman, Joint Chiefs of StaffSpeaking on“The National Security Predicament”Questions and Answers to FollowTuesday, October 18, 3:30 P.M. Social Sciences 122The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983—3British grads respond to Shields’ viewpointTo the editor:Who is R. Stratford Shields? Is he re¬ally qualified to criticize the British ed¬ucational system? As three people whohave been educated under this systemwe feel not. Indeed, we wish to refutecertain of the statements and implica¬tions made in R. Stratford Shields’ re¬cent viewpoint article “England’s edu¬cation and the upper class’’ (Oct. 7,1983).(1)“In America, there are literallythousands of colleges and 40 percent ofthe population matriculate at some col¬lege, while in England less than 10 per¬cent of the population go to universityand there are only 40 universities.”A large part of the article is based onthe gross misconception that Americancolleges are comparable with Britishuniversities. From our experience, thegeneral level of American undergradu¬ate education is comparable with Ad¬vanced level education in BritishThe following is an open letter to MaryJean Mulvaney, director of athletics.from a student in the University.Dear Prof. Mulvaney:In the first two weeks since the Au¬tumn quarter began I have been turnedaway from the University swimmingpools on three out of seven attempts touse the pools, due to the failure of the“lifeguard” to appear as scheduled.After tfoe third such occasion, whichwas yesterday evening, at Ida Noyes, Idecided to do something about it. Hav¬ing spoken with others who have fol¬lowed this problem for up to threeyears, and have attempted to resolve itboth by calling you and Patricia Kirby,who, I am told, does the scheduling,with no apparent success, I have decid¬ed to resort to this open letter in thehopes that something can finally bedone to solve the problem.As I see it, the problem does not de¬pend on stupidity or even inefficency,Support SGTo the editor:Graduate students have a very goodreason to vote in Student Govern¬ment’s Fall Elections next Monday andTuesday.On the ballot will be a proposedamendment to the SG Constitutionwhich, if approved by 60 percent of thevoting, will establish a permanent SGCommittee on Graduate Affairs. All Uof C students are eligible to vote on thisquestion, and we urge all students —undergraduates and graduates — tosupport this proposal, because we be¬lieve it is in the best interests of SG andall the students of this University. Butwe especially urge graduate and pro¬fessional students to take the time tovote next week, because this issue hasbeen advanced particularly for yoursake.Why have a Graduate Affairs Com¬mittee? Theoretically, the existingcommittees should address themselves schools and the first year of British uni¬versity education. It is only after a yearor two at graduate school that anAmerican student would attain the aca¬demic level of a British degree.While certainly there are far morecolleges in America than there are un¬iversities in Britain, to suggest that thisis indicative of a lower standard of edu¬cation is totally false. Of the very manycolleges in Chicago only a couple (in¬cluding the University of Chicago)could be said to compare with Britishuniversties. It is also misleading of R.Stratford Shields to state that there areonly 40 universities in Britian, sincemany of them (in particular, London,Oxford and Cambridge) consist ofmany completely independent institu¬tions. In addition, the figure fails totake into account other institutions ofhigher learning such as Polytechnics,Teacher Training Colleges etc., all ofwhich are comparable with good Amer¬ican colleges.(2)“In England there is an intricatebut rather upon attitude. And let mehasten to add that the lack of a serviceattitude is probably at the bottom of alot of scheduling mix-ups throughoutthe University. But it is especially ap¬parent in the lifeguards of the Univer¬sity pools, who make approximately$4.bo/hour for reading their books be¬side the pools, at the proper times ofthe day. Some of the elements of thisdeficiency are involved in the fact thatscheduling of hours is done totally tosuit them, and schedules for lifeguardsare often posted late, or they do notknow' the schedules will be posted.Most tellingly. I know of no situation inwhich a lifeguard who was scheduledto go off duty remained on duty whenthe person scheduled to relievehim/her did not show up for work. Canyou imagine a clerk in a retail businessclosing the shop when his/her reliefperson did not show up? How long doyou think that person would last on thejob? Yet that appears to be the policycommittee onto both undergraduate and graduateconcerns, but in practice this just hasnot happened. Undergraduates gener¬ally have more time and desire toserve in Student Government, and thustend to dominate SG, particularly theimportant SG committees.Student Government, however, ischarged with representing the entire Uof C student body, and so to correct thischronic imbalance, we propose the es¬tablishment of a Standing (permanent)Committee on Graduate Affairs, whoseconstitutional purpose would be to:“work in close cooperation withthe other Standing Committees ofthe Assembly to further the inter¬ests of graduate and professionalstudents at the University of Chi¬cago, and bring their concerns tothe attention of the Assembly andthe University.” system of national examinations whichseparates the intelligent from the non-academic and the rich from thepoor.”While we agree that the system is de¬signed to separate the non-academicfrom the academic, to suggest that it isalso designed to separate the rich fromthe poor is ludicrous. One of the funda¬mental features of the British universi¬ty system is that of equal opportunityregardless of wealth. All students inBritain receive free tuition and can ob¬tain government grants (not merelyloans) to support them through univer¬sity or other institutes of higher learn¬ing. A student’s choice of college is dic¬tated soley by their academic abilityand not by their ability to pay fees.(3)“...British government indirectlyencourages a student to stop school at16.”A student would receive more moneyfrom a maintenance grant to attenduniversity than he/she could from un¬employment benefit.at the U of C, even though we are allcertainly paying customers!Unfortunately, having already paid,and realizing that the physical educa¬tion component is not central to our ed¬ucational programs here, we cannotsimply withdraw our payments and goelsewhere. We must appeal to you po¬litically, and hope for the best. I thinkthat for such a simple problem to havepersisted for at least three years ofwhich you have certainly been madeaware is a disgrace, which this Univer¬sity ought not tolerate. Most likely, theself-serving attitude so evident in theline workers, and so apparently to¬lerated by their supervisors, begins atthe highest levels of the bureaucracy,and it is at this level that policies whichwill put an end to it must originate.Please let it be known that the staff ofthis business are here to serve its pay¬ing customers. For $8,000+ a year wedeserve a better deal.Michael L. Wilsongrad affairsClearly, there are numerous issuesof particular interest to graduates onthis campus that this committee canaddress, and it is also our hope that ex¬isting graduate concern groups such asSAGE will coordinate or even mergetheir functions with those of this com¬mittee, thus giving them added re¬sources and authority as an officialarm of University of Chicago StudentGovernment. Most of all, we want allgraduate and professional students toknow that SG does care about theirneeds, and is committed to being an or¬ganization to which all students of thisUniversity can bring their concerns.We realize that there may be sometendency for undergraduates to viewthis proposal as suspect, but we assureyou that such concerns are groundless.The amendment was originally pro¬posed by a student in the College, andwas overwhelmingly approved by anAssembly consisting of both under¬graduates and graduates. By demon¬strating that SG truly does representall U of C students, this amendmentwill strengthen SG’s reputation and au¬thority for the benefit of all students.As noted earlier, the elections will beMonday, Oct. 17th, and Tuesday, Oct.18th. Polling places shall be: Monday,10-2:30 at Cobb; 11:30-2:30 at the Reyn¬olds Club; 11-1 at the Medical, Law,and Business Schools; 12-1:30 at the Di¬vinity School; 5-7 p.m. at Burton Jud-son, Woodward Court, and Pierce; 6-8p.m. at the Shoreland; and 7-9 p.m. atBroadview; Tuesday, 10:30-1:30 atCobb, and 11:00-1:00 at ReynoldsClub.Again, we urge all of you to vote, andto vote “YES” to establish the Gradu¬ate Affairs Committee.Chris Hilland eight other membersof the SG Executive Council (4)“.. manual labor jobs require notype of formal education.”Does a manual worker in this countryrequire a college degree?(5) “There is nothing like a ‘good’state school in England as there is inAmerica.”Speaking from personal experienceof the British “state” school system,we find this comment totally unfound¬ed, merely revealing R. StratfordShields’ complete ignorange of the sys¬tem. We also wonder why with so many“good” state schools in Chicago somany Chicagoans choose to send theirchildren to private schools.The only comment in R. StratfordShields’ article with which we feel wecan agree is his admission that “thismay be a poor summary of the English(British?) educational system.”We certainly do not wish to implythat we believe that the British educa¬tional system is perfect. We feel thatboth the British and American systemshave their strengths and weaknesses.However, we feel obliged to correct anymisconceptions which might have ari¬sen as a result of the article by R. Strat¬ford Shields.Stephen Freedman,Department of Pharmacologicaland Physiological SciencesAndrea FreedmanAdrian Ottewill,Enrico Fermi InstituteNo piano feeTo the editor:Having survived four years in theCollege, I am quite familiar with theoccasional shortsightedness and insen¬sitivity of this University, but have notbeen fed up enough before to write aletter denouncing some of the inequi¬ties I have witnessed on this campus.Now having reached my breakingpoint, I feel I must speak out againstthe imposition of a quarterly fee of $5 touse one of the antiquated and perpetu¬ally out-of-tune pianos in the practicerooms of the Reynolds Club.As a composer with too little time toget to a piano, I have been forced to usethe run-down pianos in the RC, andsince I had no other choice, I made agreat effort to deal with the patheticconditions in the music rooms; theseinclude missing keys, lack of acousticinsulation between rooms, coffee leftspilled on the keyboard, etc. In thepast, I figured “Well, life’s like that”and made out as best I could under thecircumstances. But to have to pay $15or $20 per year to have this “privilege”is adding insult to injury. The absurdi¬ty of it all just boggles my mind.What bothers me just as much is theway in which this fee has been quietlyimposed. Who decided to do such a stu¬pid thing in the first place, and whywas the University community notmade aware of this fascist action be¬fore it was too late to stop it? The Ad¬ministration is always coming out withthese “grandiose” plans for improvingstudent life here. It strikes me that theeffort and intention could be betterserved by ameliorating some of the lit¬tle things on campus. I’m not askingmuch — perhaps an increase in thelevel of humanity of the Bursar’s of¬fice, or something of that nature. Nothaving to pay to use the practice roomswould be a nice step in the right direc¬tion, I think.I’m sure the powers that be willargue that by charging a fee for themusic rooms, the pianos might betuned more frequently. I think it wouldbe delightful to tune them more often,but why does this necessitate a fee of $5per quarter? Surely I’ve paid morethan enough in tuition, breakage fees,etc. to allow the University to afford anoccasional tuning job.I realize that this is a minor com¬plaint in the scope of things, and thatfor some people (I am not amongcontinued on page fiveThe 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.Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorAnna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorSondra KruegerFeatures EditorPurnima DubeyAssistant Features Editor Frank LubySports EditorPeter OsterlundViewpoints EditorAra JelalianPhotography EditorLinda LeeProduction ManagerAssociate Editors: Michael Elliott, Koyin Shih, Guy Ward.Staff: Steve Barnhart, Zlatko Batistich, Mark Blocker, Jane Burke, Anthony Cashman,Charles Coant, Spencer Colden, Wally Dabrowski, Amy Eiden, Pat Finegan, Bob Fisher,Paul Flood, Keith Horvath, Kathy Lindstrom, Jane Look, Jeff Makos, Leah Schlesinger,Nathan Schoppa, Hilary Till, Jeff Wolf.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983Student wants better ‘service attitude’Pick lecture: wishingTo the editor:This year’s Alfred Pick lecture was adisgrace. The organizing committee theshowed no concern for accomodatingthose who wanted to hear ChancellorSchmidt speak. The committee seemedcontent on staging a “production” in¬stead of a major university lecture, byone of the greatest Western leaders ofour time.Mandel Hall, which holds only a fewhundred people, was definitely toosmall for this event. It is not hard to be¬lieve that there would be so many peo¬ple who wanted to hear Mr. Schmidt.The decision to hold the Pick lecture inTune the pianos!continued from page fourthese) $5 per quarter is a trivialamount of money. But I feel it’s a mat¬ter of principle — why is this fee beingcharged now, without any debate, andfor the amount of $5 per quarter? SinceI am not naive enough to believe theUniversity cares enough to do anythingabout this matter, I would like to takeup a non-violent protest — I am boycot¬ting the RC practice rooms (and I urge Mandel seems absolutely irrational.There was no lack of larger buildingswhich could have been used for thisevent, and which had been used formany previous lectures. Two examplesshould suffice: In autumn 1981, HansKung, the Swiss theologian, gave aseries of lectures from the pulpit ofRockefeller Chapel. Last spring,George Stigler presented a lecture inthe Law School’s auditorium whichwas simulcast to other rooms to acco¬modate the crowds. It would be diffi¬cult to accept any reason for the failureby the organizers of this lcture to ex¬tend a similar honor to Herr Schmidt.all interested parties to do the same)until the fee is either abolished or at thevery least reduced to nothingness. Oneshould realize that if this illegal fee isnot questioned, it will not only remainimposed, but will very likely increasewith time, just like tuition seems to doevery February.David Blair ToubFirst-year Student inThe Medical School ushers wereIn the event, however, a line of peo¬ple stretched from the main hall of theReynolds Club, around to the corner of57th and University, and more than ablock up University Avenue. It was byno means rare to see people who hadwaited more than forty-five minutesfor the doors of Mandel Hall to beopened. When the doors were finallyopened at 5:05 for the 5:30 lecture, avirtual stampede ensued. The crowdwould have been more at home in Co-misky Park than in a lecture hall. (Theushers were about as courteous asscalpers.) Indeed, the five hundred orso people who were left out in the coldafter the lecture began may havewished that the ushers had beenscalpers.Naturally, President Gray and otherprivileged members of the Universi¬ty’s hierarchy did not have to endurethe circus-like atmosphere in the mainhallway. They were accommodatednot only with five rows of reservedfront line seating, but also with a sepa¬rated entrance. This stands in markedcontrast to last year’s Pick lecture,given by Shirley Williams, when these scalpersillustrious personages did not deem itnecessary to attend.The whole atmosphere of this year’slecture seemed to reflect the Gray ad¬ministration’s policy of treating stu¬dents like second-class citizens in thisalleged institute of equals. We for two,do not believe that students should payover ten thousand dollars a year for theprivilege of being treated like cattle.Perhaps Mrs. Gray feels bound toserve the Board of Trustees, and thePick Committee was bound to servesome other interest, but someoneshould be bound to serve the principlesof learning and easy access to the ideasthat a university represents.We feel that the members of the or¬ganizing committee owe both the stu¬dent body and Chancellor Schmidt anapology for the intolerable circum¬stances surrounding this year’s lec¬ture. We hope that future lectures willbe organized in a manner which makesthem both pleasant and accessible toall who want to attend.Julius B. SantiseAlex BaghdassarianThird-year students in the College' )C1®§ - ;:lf| i-l5 ii, I NEWSNowaczewski wins women’s law awardBy Deborah LutterbeckJeanne L. Nowaczewski, a student inthe Law School, accepted a grantawarded her by the Women’s Bar Asso¬ciation of Illinois Sept. 9.Nowaczewski said that the $2500would obviously be of assistance, butshe also believed that the fact that theWomen’s Bar Association has reachedthe point where it can offer financialsupport in addition to professional as¬sistance, draws attention to the factthat there are successful women law¬yers who are supporting and encourag¬ing each other.The Women’s Bar Association wasestablished in 1914, and has extendedfar beyond its earlier position when itbasically offered women the opportuni¬ty to meet and discuss problems pecu¬liar to woman lawyers. The Women'sBar Association of Illinois currentlyhas both men and women attorneys,some of whom are judges presiding ininternational cases, and others thatmediate in domestic entanglements.The association has also recently be¬come extremely active in Springfield,advocating civil rights legislation.Nowaczewski earned both her bache¬lor’s and master’s degrees in Englishfrom the University of Chicago. SheWoodward lectureBy Nathan SchoppaSunday’s Woodward Court lecture,“Othello and Otello: Shakespeare andVerdi,” will feature David Bevingtonand Ellen Harris, in a lecture whichshould be of interest to humanities andmusic students.Bevington, who will speak first, is aprofessor in the department of Englishlanguage and literature and the Col¬lege. Harris is an assistant professor inthe department of music and the Col¬lege.The lecture will focus on the prob¬lems involved in writing a libretto froma play, and turning it into an operaticproduction. The speakers will discusshow Shakespeare’s Othello was alteredinto Veredi’s opera Otello.Specifically, Bevington will discusshow the recasting of Othello into a playaffects characterization. A special ef¬fort will be made to look at the villian-ous character Iago. Changes in the set¬ting, especially the time element, willalso be discussed.After Bevington’s initial half-hourlecture, Harris will continue on similarthemes and explain how music in theopera adds to the story of the originalShakespearean drama. Taped musicfrom the opera might be used to helpher and the audience.The lecture will also include somecomments on the extensive adoption ofShakespearean plays by librettists. originally intended to become a teach¬er, and during her graduate studies sheworked at the University of ChicagoNursery Schools. During this periodshe decided she could better apply herskills as a lawyer. She still maintainsthere is nothing better than a goodteacher; however, she found the worldoutside the classroom was more stimu¬lating and offered her more flexibili¬ty.The year before Nowaczewski en¬tered law school she worked as a para¬legal. During that time she extensivelyresearched prison reform. Her re¬search required her to interview bothprisoners and their wardens at the Sta-teville Penitentiary. As a result of thisresearch she learned that a case sel¬dom goes as planned, and one mustride with the tide rather than get rolledwith the punches.Nowaczewski is in her third year oflaw school. She is working as an editorfor the Chicago Law Review, and is fo¬cusing her studies on litigation. In thefuture, she hopes to work for a firmthat offers her a variety of responsibili¬ties including “pro bono” work, whichis basically free legal council for thosewho cannot afford it.David BevingtonMost of Shakespeare’s plays have beenadapted by librettists.The lecture is an outgrowth of an un¬dergraduate course taught by Beving¬ton and Harris last year, “Shakespeareat the Opera.” Though not taught thisyear, the course may be available in al¬ternating years.Those who have minimal backgroundin Shakespeare should find the lectureprofitable, as the designs of the lectureare aimed at all interested students. Jeanne NowaczewskiYouth theater programThe Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter, 1100 E, Hyde Park Blvd., isprojecting a youth theater group forteen-age students. This group will bepreparing a full-scale production forpresentation next March. The group iscurrently meeting Tuesdays at 6:30p.m. For further information, callSonya Burns at 268-4600.Chairlift keepingBy Sondra KruegerHow’s the chairlift? Jeff Ellis sound¬ed weary. “It’s working, but it’s kind ofan embarrassment.” He wishes Presi¬dent Gray could have been there forthe first performance. The lift got Ellisback down to the first floor, and thenleft him there — stranded for 35 min¬utes because the door wouldn’t open.Ellis’s litany of his experiences withthe Social Service Administrationbuilding wheelchair lift thus far bearsa rather pathetic resemblance to aMarx brothers movie. “Last Tuesday,I got out of class at 10, got on the lift,closed the door. Someone pulled thelever for me. There’s a big noise, itdoes down a foot and a half, stops andtilts back. So we take it up and tryagain. It goes down a foot and a halfand stops. I waited on the second floor’til 12:30 before they got it fixed.”The chairlift has provided steadywork for repairmen since it was in¬stalled. ‘They’ve oiled the chains, loo¬sened the bolts, tightened the bolts.”PHOTO BY ARA J E LA LI AN Painters’ strike overBy Cliff GrammichAlthough a strike by Chicago areapainters and decorators against thePainting and Decorating ContractorsAssociation recently halted work tem¬porarily, dedication ceremonies for theUniversity’s new medical facilities willtake place as scheduled tomorrow.Area painters and decorators recent¬ly held an 11-day strike which conclud¬ed Wednesday. The University hadhired contractors which employ unionworkers for work on its medical facili¬ties, according to Richard R. Howes,assistant director for human resourcesmanagement. Howes said that workwas stopped last week for four dayswhen members of the union picketed acontractor which the University hadhired. The picketing at the Universitywas one of several sites throughout theChicago area which was targeted bythe union.Nevertheless. Howes said that thecontractors were easily able to com¬plete work on the medical facilities fortomorrow's dedication. The Paintingand Decorating Contractors Associa¬tion unanimously approved Tuesday aunion proposal which calls for a 50 per¬cent increase in health contributions.Picketing against contractors hired bythe University ended last week.Tomorrow’s dedication will mark thecompletion of work on the Bernard Mit¬chell Hospital, the Arthur Rubloff In¬tensive Care Tower, and the new Chi¬cago Lying-In Hospital.repairmen busyEllis feels the University went onlyhalfway, installing the cheapest modelthey could find, and even that only be¬cause he and other SSA students pro¬tested so vehemently last year.The purpose of the lift was to givehandicapped students access to upper-floor classes, but, says Ellis, “It’s aninadequate means. It can’t be used in¬dependently, and it’s not going to killanyone to help me, but still the ideawas to have independent access.” Ellishas been able to get to class, but theprocess is not easy, nor is it inconspicu¬ous. “It’s so noisy, so ugly — it’s em¬barrassing.”Ellis is not prepared to fight anylonger, however. He led the movementwhich promopted the installation of thelift, but he’s had enough, even thoughthere is still a lot to be done to makecampus accessible to the handicapp¬ed.“I just want to go to school. Someoneelse will have to lead the fight.”The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983—5mmmWalk With TheStars!Join In!24-Hour Information(312) 829-WALKWatch TV-38 for Updates New lecture serieson American politicsTheda Skocpol, associate professorin the Departments of Sociology andPolitical Science, will present the firstlecture of a new four-part series of lec¬tures and panel discussion, aboutAmerican Politics and Social Policy inthe ’80s, Monday at 4 p.m. in SocialScience 122. Skocpol’s lecture is enti¬tled, “The Legacies of New Deal Liber¬alism and Prospects for LiberalismToday.”The lecture-discussion series pro¬vides a forum for discussion and evalu¬ation of the politics both of Ronald Rea¬gan’s domestic policy changes and ofproposed alternative policy innova¬tions.Three other programs are plannedfor the series this fall: October 24,Gary Orfield, professor in the Depart-PHOTOS BY CHARLES COANTDonut a la gargoyle. ments of Political Science and Educa¬tion, will speak on ‘.‘The Rise and Fallof Federal Civil Rights Enforcement,”Social Science 122, 4 p.m.; Nov. 7, Zil-lah Eisenstein of Ithaca Collage —whose talk is co-sponsored by theForum for Feminist Scholarship — willtalk about “The Reagan State and the‘Gender Gap’,” Swift Lecture Hall;and Nov. 21, there will be a discussionof the politics of reindustrialization bythree panelists from the University ofChicago: Yale Brozen, professor ofbusiness economics, Terry Clark, asso¬ciate professor of urban sociology, andDuncan Snidal, assistant professor ofpolitical science, Social Science 122, 4p.m.The series is supported by grantsfrom the following groups: the Center for the Study of Industrial Societies,the Committee on Public Policy Study!the Department of Political Science!the Forum for Feminist Scholarship!Forum for Liberal Learning, and Pub¬lic Policy Studies in the College.Skocpol, winner of the 1979 C. WrightMills Award of the Study of SocialProblems for her book States and So¬cial Revolutions, will address the polit¬ical limits of New Deal reforms andtheir significance for policy innovatorstoday. The lecture is based on an arti¬cle, “The Legacies of New Deal Liber¬alism” forthcoming in Douglas Ma-cLean and Claudia Mills (eds.)Liberalism Reconsidered, Totowa,N.J.; Rowman and Allenhead, which isalso published in Dissent (Winter1983).Coffeeshops on campus have opened to serve students daily. Weiss,located in Harper, the Nonesuch, located in Classics, and Cobb coffee-shops opened their doors last week to returning students. Picturedhere is Weiss coffeeshop, on the Harper mezzanine.The Major Activities Board PresentsSATURDAY, OCTOBER 228:00 p.m.MANDEI HALLTICKETS SALES FOR STUDENTS ONLY: OCTOBER 17& OCTOBER 18TICKETS SALES FOR NON-STUDENTS BEGINS OCTOBER 19Tickets on sale at the Reynolds Club Box Office962-7300STUDENTS W/U. of C. I.D. (Limit 2 tickets per I.D.) -$5ALL OTHERS-$8PAT METHENY GROUPI enjoy my contactLenses made byDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372IMAROON -I—962-95551Michael Marwick D.D.S. andMonica Kargl - Marwick D.D.S.Dental Practice1525 E. 53rd St.Room 604Hyde ParkBank Building752-788810% Student DiscountInsurance Accepted STUDENT GOVERNMENTASSEMBLY MEETINGSFor the Remainder of Autumn Quarter:Thursday October 20th 7:30 P.M.Tuesday November 1st 7:30 P.M.Thursday November 10th 7:30 P.M.Thursday November 17 7:30 PMAll meetings in Stuart 105Alt students welcome.MORRY'S ICE CREAM EMPORIUM PRESENTS:MOWS HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS!5 p.m. - 8 p.m.Come visit us at our “C-Shop”location. Buy a 2-scoop sundaeor milk shake, and get a »4♦4444444444444444444444444444+4'"IIIIIIIIIIIIIFREE JUMBO MORRY’S CONE IFlavors of the Week:Haagen DazsBoysenberry Ice & Cassis SorbetTo Ease The PainOf Summer’s PassingWe Have An Analgesic AtCOPYWORKSSPECIAL SEPT. 19th TO OCT. 15, 1983COPIES416*(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.jr HIGH SPEED CASSETTETAPE COPYING2 Sided — 30, 60. 90 and 120 Minute Tapes Copiedin under 4 Minutes. See our Special Ad for Details.COPYWORKS, L«dIN HARPER COURT • 5210 S. HARPER • 288-2233 RockefellerChapel)<HNSundayOctober 16, 19839 a.m.Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 a.m.University Religious ServiceBERNARD O. BROWN•Dean of RockefellerMemorial Chapel12:15 and 4 p.m.Carillon tour and recital ■KIMBARKSPECIALSSale Dates: 10/14-10/20LIQUORSMIRNOFF VODKA 80750 m! $439BACARDI RUM750 mi *4”CANADIAN MIST750 ml. $519JIM BEAM750 ml $4«9JOHNNIE WALKER RED750 ml $099GORDON S GIN750 ml $459MARTELL 3-STARCOGNAC750 ml *12"HENNESSY VSCOGNAC750 ml SI 1 99AMORITA AMARETTO750 ml s6"PARTY SIZESPECIALSSKOL VODKA1.75 ltr $7 49SASHA GIN1.75 ltr $•749XII CLANS SCOTCH1.75 ltr $999JUG WINESPECIALSMENDOCINO WINES (Calif.) $^99(Red. White, Rose) 1.5 ltrLOUIS GLUNZ (France)(Red, White) 1.5 ltr $499ROBERT MONDAVITABLE WINE(Red, W hite. Rose) 1.5 ltr $6"CRESTA BLANCA(Rhine, Chablis. Burgundy! 1.5 ltr *499BOLLA WINES(Soave, Valpocella. Bardolinol1.5 ltr $6"GALLO WINES1.5 ltr $099INGLENOOK NAVALLE1.5 ltr $099CARLO ROSSI3.0 ltr $399BEERSTROH’S6-12 02. cans $009(warm only)ST. PAULI GIRL6-12 02. bottle $099(warm only)Kimbark liquors& wine shoppe1214 E. 53rd. St.In Kimbark PlazaPhone: 493-3355Sun.-Noon-MidnightHours: Mon.-Thurs. 8am - lamFn. & Sat. Sam - 2amV JThe Chicago Maroon—Friday. October 14. 1983—7Computersimprovedcontinued from page one•The computer facilities were defi¬cient in powerful full screen text edi¬tors.•There were not enough computerterminals for the University’s com¬puter user community.Several changes have been imple¬mented to solve these problems. Lastyear another DECsystem 2060 com¬puter was acquired. This new com¬puter, which is known as “Chip,” im¬proved the CPU situation. (The otherDEC-20 computer is known as“Dale.”) With the increased CPU anduser capacity that resulted from theprocurement of an additional com¬puter, the charges for CPU and con¬nect time on a DEC-20 decreased by 50percent last school year.For batch computing, the Amdahlcomputer has been replaced by an IBM3081D computer this year. It has moreCPU capacity than the Amdahl. Withmore CPU capacity, the IBM 3081Dshould not be as readily “saturatedwith demands” as the Amdahl. TheIBM is also an improvement over theAmdahl in that it can provide more on¬line systems than its predecessor, ac¬cording to the Computation Center’sManager of the Applications SystemHal Bloom.A new operating system for batchcomputing was also recently procured.The operating system is what the userinteracts with when communicatingwith the computer. The new IBM 3081Doperates under the recently acquiredand implemented Multiple VirtualStorage (MVS) system, which is in es¬sence a large software package. Boththe new computer and the new operat¬ing system were acquired at the sametime and implemented together.The change this summer from SVS,the old operating system, whichoperated the Amdahl, to MVS, whichnow operates the IBM 3081D, was ne¬cessitated by changes in the computerindustry. The SVS software was nolonger supported by its producer, IBM.All the latest IBM hardware and sof¬tware are designed to run under theMVS operating system. Also, if therewere a problem in the SVS operatingsystem, which is considered a systemof the past, IBM would not fix it. Thenew MVS operating system could havebeen implemented on the Amdahl. Thiswas not done for two reasons. First, amore powerful batch system computerthan the Amdahl was needed as statedbefore, so MVS was implemented onthe newer and better IBM computer.And second, it would cause chaos to godirectly from one operating system toanother entirely different one over¬night. In order to ease the transitionfrom SVS to MVS, an additional com¬puter, the IBM 3081D was acquired sothat both operating systems could berunning at the same time for a while.Dimension, a German literarypublication at the University ofTexas, has been awarded a $30,000grant from the West German foreignoffice.Dimension is one of the fewperiodicals of German literaturepublished in the world, often printingfirst-run works from German poets,authors, and artists. Since itsestablishment in 1968, the magazinehas published works by 350 Germanauthors.The money was an anonymous giftand has no strings attached. Thefunds will be used to cover printingcosts for the magazine, which ispublished three times a year. Aspecial double issue is planned forthis fall. The German government hasrequested 2000 copies of the 400-pageissue, which will feature works from45 German authors. Both systems have been running fromApril to the present with the SVS/Am-dahl system gradually being phasedout. Currently only a small number ofresidual programs are still onSVS/Amdahl. A firm decision has notbeen made yet on what to do with theAmdahl computer once the SVS systemis entirely phased out. It is likely,though, that it will be sold.Along with the purchase of a newoperating system, two new enhancedsystems were acquired to run on MVS.A whole new financial accounting sys¬tem for the University and an im¬proved security system were procured.Unlike the previous locally developedsecurity system, all of a user’s files inthe MVS/IBM system will be protectedautomatically unless the user specifiesotherwise.As far as the deficient software com¬plaint goes, the Computation Centerobtained two very powerful text editingprograms, the SED full screen editorand the MUSE word processing sys¬tem. These programs were acquiredlast year and run on the DEC-20S.The last cited problem with the com¬puter facilities was the shortage of ter¬minals. Even though the terminal situ¬ation is still a sticky problem, it hasgotten much better. Last year the Com¬putation Center procured many televi¬deo terminals, which have partly alle¬viated the problem.Because of the increased number ofterminals, software, computers, andthe new operating system, one third-year student in the college concluded,“The computing situation has im¬proved drastically over the last twoyears.”Schmidtcontinued from page one“Only in this important field of Euro-strategic weapons does there exist aclear superiority right now that mustbe brought into balance. This must beput right.”Despite this imbalance, Schmidt in¬sisted that there was “too much nu¬clear ammunition and not enough con¬ventional ammunition” on Europeansoil. The nuclear strategy, which hesaid gave “the appearance of destroy¬ing what we wish to defend” might beseen as “inadequate and unaccept¬able” he speculated. If so, he added,“we’ll have to be able to roughly matchthe adversary in the field in terms ofarms and man, and we’ll have to stabi¬lize that conventional equilibrium bylimitation treaty.”But, Schmidt said, the only way tomaintain a credible conventional de¬terrent, as opposed to a nuclear one, is“to have men in uniform — soldiers.”Such a need, he said, dictated conscrip¬tion.“My country has maintained nation¬al service and conscription. It’s notthat easy if other nations don’t. We canfield 1.3 million soldiers in a couple ofdays, if necessary. The Russians knowthis full well.” In reference to Reagan administration pressure on Europeannations to increase their defense bud¬gets, Schmidt added, “whoever hasabandoned national service and con¬scription ought to be careful in criticiz¬ing other partners because of theirbudgets.”“If you want to convince your ownpeople that defense efforts are neces¬sary I think you have to tell them thatevery male has to contribute some¬thing, and not just to the taxpayer bypaying a little more taxes.” Schmidtemphasized, however, that even thebest laid strategic plans were uselesswithout the backing of an informed andunified electorate. “You cannot imposea strategy that has not been acceptedby, at least, a majority of the peo¬ple.”“Some of our own postures and plansnowadays suffer from growing deficitsamong our own public,” Schmidt ob¬served. “If we fail to provide answersin due course,” he added, “our credi¬bility deterrence-wise will suffer enor¬mously. If we fail to convince the pub¬lic in our parliaments, how can wehope to convince the Soviet Union? Ifour credibility suffers in the eyes ofpublic opinion, the credibility of ourstrategy of course has to suffer in theevaluations of the people in the Krem¬lin.”While a strong military posture,Schmidt argued, is critical to any poli¬cy dealing with the Soviet bloc, he alsoemphasized the race to win the heartsof third world countries as being of par¬amount importance.Of late, the Soviets have been suc¬cessfully winning the loyalties of na¬tions in Southeast Asia, Africa, and theMiddle East, he said. This has been duepartly, he added, to the world recessionaggravated, Schmidt charged, by highUS interest rates.“Due to the United States’ budgetarydeficit, by which the US has becomethe greatest importer of capital allover the globe — and not the thirdworld countries, who ought to be thegreatest importer of capital — has alsobrought about, in order to achieve thefinances necessary for your deficits thehighest level of peacetime interestrates ever. So the possible rate of profi¬tability of real investment, especiallyin the third world, has been vastlyovertaken by the rate of interest.Therefore, no one is investing in capi¬tal; everyone is investing into financialassets.”“Mostly economies from the thirdworld are suffering from that. On top ofthat they are suffering from having topay much higher interest rates thanthey were looking for then when theyfirst undertook their loans and cred¬its.”The resulting hardships, Schmidtpointed out, lead to “political destabili¬zation and under such circumstances,the Soviet Union could easily political¬ly intrude under multiple forms and al¬ready is fishing successfully in somesuch troubled waters.”Thus, Schmidt said, the world reces¬sion had occurred a “grand strategyquality” which merited the immediateattention of the Western alliance.”HITHER AND YONA pro-Palestinian Jew speaking atU Penn was called a traitor by angrymembers of his audience.Israel Shahak is chairman of theIsraeli League for Human and CivilRights. His topic was “IsraeliProblems Today,” and his talk wasfrequently interrupted by shouting.Shahak said “The same form ofdiscrimination which was inflicted onJews are inflicted on Palestinians,”adding that there should be aminimum standard of individualrights for all human beings.Shahak compared the treatment ofArabs living in Israel to the racialdiscrimination experienced by blacksin this country during the 1960s.Many students felt that Shahak wasdealing in half-truths, saying that“audience misbehavior was definitelyjustified.” Secretary of Education TerrenceBell spoke at the University ofPennsylvania Sept. 20, calling fortougher secondary schoolrequirements and backing merit payfor teachers.Bell spoke at a conference oneducation which also included NewJersey Governor Thomas Kean andDelaware Governor Pierre DuPont.The conference was sponsored by theDepartment of Education and drewalmost a thousand legislators fromfive states and Washington, D.C.Topics addressed, in addition to themerit pay issue, ranged fromimprovement of writing programs tothe National Commission onExcellence in Education report, “ANation at Risk.” Such an area, he said, presented theWest with an opportunity for actionthrough “consultation and coopera¬tion.”Schmidt, who presented a history ofthe W’est’s postwar Soviet strategy inhis talk, observed that it would be thetask of political leaders in the eightiesto see that these challenges are met“with consistency among allies andconsistency among the methods whichgovernments try to achieve thesegoals.”Jonescontinued from page oneSince his retirement in 1982 from ac¬tive military duty, Jones has been in¬volved in lecturing, writing, and con¬sulting on national security matters.He is a member of the board of US Air,US Steel, RCA, Kemper Insurance andthe National Education Corporation.Jones will arrive on campus Mondaymorning. He will eat lunch in Piercecafeteria, and conduct a discussion oninternational security issues with pub¬lic policy students in the afternoon.Jones will also have dinner with a fewstudents from Pierce with residentmaster Charles M. Cohen.Jones, a vocal advocate for organiza¬tional reform in the Pentagon, will dis¬cuss complex organizations with Ed¬ward Laumann of the Department ofSociology and selected studentsWednesday morning, and will leavecampus Wednesday afternoon.Union officialdiesRegina V. Polk, business agent forInternational Brotherhood of Team¬sters Local 743, which represents sev¬eral groups of office and clericalworkers at the University, died lateTuesday on Air Illinois flight 10. Polkwas en route from Springfield to Car-bondale when her plane crashed in Ta-maroa, three miles east of Pickney-ville. All aboard the plane werekilled.As business agent for Local 743, Polkorganized thousands of workers at theU of C, Governors State University,and Chicago State University. Polk hadearned a degree in industrial relationsfrom the U of C.Polk earned money for her educationat the University by hostessing at aNorth Side restaurant; however, sheled a protest against against workingconditions and was fired. She soughthelp from Local 743, won a grievanceagainst the restaurant, and joined thelabor movement. Polk first startedwork for the union in 1979.Visitation for Polk is from 12:30 p.m.to 1 p.m. tomorrow at the First Uni¬tarian Church, 5650 S. Woodlav/n Ave.Services are at 1 p.m. In lieu of flow¬ers, Polk’s family requests that dona¬tions be made to the Animal WelfareLeague, 6224 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago,60637.Saying that “We are the consumersof the public school system,” SheldonHackney, president of U Penn, hasannounced a plan to provide financialand managerial aid to thePhiladelphia Public Schools.Funding for the program will comeprimarily from private individualsand the National Endowment for theHumanities. University faculty vvillprovide training and consulation forPhiladelphia public school teachers.»—ine cmcago Maroon—Eriday, October 14, 1983Draft/aid lawBy Michael ElliottAs everyone who applied for finan¬cial aid knows, Uncle Sam wants you —or rather, wants to make sure he canfind you if he wants you. Under theterms of the Solomon Amendment,every US citizen receiving federal edu¬cational aid must prove that he has ei¬ther registered with the Selective Ser¬vice or is exempt because of age, sex,or residence in the Trust Territories inthe South Pacific. Since its summerpassage, the Solomon Amendment hasraised a storm of controversy amonglegislators trying to effectively enforcethe Selective Service Act, universityofficials who view it as an unfairbureaucratic boondoggle, and studentswho feel it discriminates against poorand middle-class men dependent onsuch aid for their education.Here in Chicago, most students havesimply gone through the process asjust another avenue of bureaucracy inthe complex maze of government fund¬ing. Art Sussman, general counsel forthe University and official spokesmanfor the University on this matter, said,“It appears that on this campus andother campuses, people are providingthe required information.” Sussmansaid that “the University has stronglyexpressed the belief that financial aidand Selective Service should be sepa¬rate. Student Aid has one national pur¬pose; Selective Service another. Uni¬versities should not deputize.”Nevertheless, students requesting fi¬nancial aid will continue to have to signSelective Service compliance forms.According to Sussman, these forms sofar have been treated just as any otherof the several education complianceforms that must be signed to receivefederal aid — they are dropped into theloan packet folders here at the Univer¬sity, never to be seen again unless au¬dited by the federal government. Sofar, the forms have not been inspected,and “no one has lost aid,” said Suss¬man.The suggestion floated last springthat the University of Chicago mightmake up any lost federal aid throughprivate grants, as some other universi¬ties have done. This was rejected, saidSussman, “because the increasingoverall level of aid made it unfeasi-Denied funding by Student Govern¬ment last month, members of Inquirymagazine will once again go before theSG Finance Committee to requestfunding for the publication next week.Inquiry, which publishes papers ofoutstanding quality by students in theUniversity, was originally denied fund¬ing on the basis of its being what SGFCmembers called “too academic.” Also,last year’s Finance Committee set theprecedent of denying the magazine The University of Chicago is notalone in balking at the SolomonAmendment. Most major educationalorganizations in the country, from indi¬vidual private colleges to Washington-based lobbying organizations have pro¬tested. One such group is COPUS, theNational Coalition of Independent Col¬lege and University Students, whichlobbies for student interests on CapitolHill and through Washington. JonathanKatz, a graduate student in the Univer¬sity who worked for COPUS this sum¬mer, breaks down their opposition tothe bill into three categories: “First,it’s a bureaucratic hassle for everyoneinvolved. Second, it has turned finan¬cial aid officers into Selective Serviceofficers, which is not what they aretrained or hired to be. But primarily itis discriminatory. If you are female orrich, it does not apply to you. We’re notobjecting to registration, but to thismethod of enforcement.”Katz pointed to the summer intro¬duction of the bill, which he saw asbeing deliberately timed to prevent or¬ganized student political action. Thelegislation passed practically withoutopposition, and COPUS’s “argumentsfell on deaf ears,” says Katz.Also, Katz complained that other or¬ganizations ignored the legislationuntil it was too late. “We were a voicein the wilderness. Now that the bill islaw, nearly every educational organi¬zation is against it.” In particular,Katz accused NASFAA (the NationalAssociation of Student Financial AidAdministrators) of staying quiet, hop¬ing that by avoiding confrontation, thelegislation would provide only a tokenamount of work for financial aid ad¬ministrators.The Office of College Aid declinedcomment, having been instructed thatUniversity Legal Counsel was to an¬swer all questions.The Nader-based Minnesota PublicInterest Research Group has filed suitagainst the law, challenging that its en¬forcement was discriminatory. Theclaim was upheld in Minnesota DistrictCourt, but was overturned by the ap¬pellate court. Now the Supreme Courtmust decide on the constitutionality ofthe law.funds, and the Office of the Dean of tneCollege picked up the fees for both oflast year’s issues.After looking into the cost of publish¬ing an issue of Inquiry, Associate DeanRichard Taub said yesterday that theDean’s office would again give moneyto Inquiry, but only part of the amountneeded to publish. Inquiry’s originalrequest was for $831.50, and the Dean’soffice has agreed to put forward $500 ofthat.ble.”Lisa Frusztajer and Mirah Germain, members of the editorial boardof Inquiry.Inquiry gets $500 from Dean of events at the Student VolunteerBureau. In the coming weeks we willhighlight various volunteer jobs andgive other volunteer information. Es¬sentially, the Bureau refers students toagencies in Hyde Park and throughoutChicago. The volunteer positions on filecover a wide spectrum of interests,have various training requirementsand call for varying levels of commit¬ment.If a featured position interests you,ask about it at the Student VolunteerBureau; if not, stop by anyway to find ajob suited to your personal interests.The University is currently granting$250 per quarter to a limited number ofstudents who want to serve as volun¬teers. Students must demonstrate thatthe volunteer position fits into personalacademic plans, and that by volunteer¬ing they will either forfeit a job or incurother expenses. This is an excellent op¬portunity for students whose work pro¬hibits volunteering or who need moneyfor transportation, lunches, etc. Formore information, stop by the Bureau.This week’s featured volunteeragency is the Blue Gargoyle TutoringProgram. The Chicago Teachers’Strike has severely disrupted HydePark grade schools; tutors are In greatdemand to help out until a settlement isreached.Right now, both new and experiencedtutors are meeting at the Blue Gar¬goyle on Tuesdays and Wednesdaysfrom 1 to 4 p.m. Under the guidance ofSara Pitcher, a group orientation is fol¬lowed by one-on-one sessions. More stu¬dents than tutors are showing op; yourhelp Is truly needed. If interested, stopby the Blue Gargoyle.The Student Volunteer Bureau is lo¬cated on the third floor of the Blue Gar¬goyle. Stop by or call at 955-410$.U of C prof chosen to scholarship boardJames A. Shapiro, professor in thedepartment of microbiology at the Uni¬versity, has accepted an invitation tojoin the Midwest Region Committee forthe Marshall Scholarships. Shapirowas a former Marshall Scholar atCorpus Christi College in Cambridge.The Marshall Scholarship programwas established in 1963 by the UnitedKingdom government as an expressionof British gratitude for the Europeanrecovery program instituted by Gener¬al George Marshall in 1947. The pur¬ pose of the program is to enable citi¬zens of the United States, who aregraduates of American colleges anduniversities, to study for a degree at auniversity in the United Kingdom for aperiod of at least two academic years.The regional boards — Mid-Easti Washington), Mid-West (Chicago),North-East (Boston), Pacific (SanFrancisco), and Southern (Atlanta) —judge candidates from their regions forMarshall Scholarship eligibility.The Chicago Maroonannounces it's nextSTAFF MEETING:SUNDAY8 p.m.The Chicago Maroon—Friday. October 14, 1983—9Contacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain? CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATION53SO South Shore DrivepresentsCHICAGO'S 150TH ANNIVERSARY: THE RELIGIOUS DIMENSIONA special Adult Education series in observance of our city's birthday.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 Lenses7 SUNOAY. OCTOBER 23, 11:00 a.m.A Service of Celebration"It Happened Here: Major Developments in Chicago'sReligious Life, 1833-1983"Guest Preacher: Or. Martin MartyUniversity of ChicagoOur Service will include special prayers of Thanks¬giving on this historic milestone, and liturgicalrrusic by Chicago composers. Professor Marty, America'sleading religious historian, will discuss the majordevelopments in American religious life and thoughtthat originated here in Chicago.SUNOAY. OCTOBER 30, 1:30 p.m."The Art and Architecture of Chicago's Churchesand Synagogues: An Illustrated Tour"Guest Speaker: Reverend George LaneLoyola UniversityFather Lane, author of the recent best-selling bookChicago Churches and Synagogues, will present a slidelecture on the magnificent sanctuaries Chicagoans havebuilt for the worship of God. Historic edifices of allour city's faiths will be featured.SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 12:30 p.m,"The History of Chicago Jewry: An Illustrated Overview"Guest Speaker: Rachel HeimovicsAuthor; President, Chicago JewishHistorical SocietyRachel Heimovics, well-known local historian and author,will present her acclaimed illustrated lecture on thehistory of our Jewish Community - with a special focuson the "Golden Days" of South Side Jewish life in thelate 19th and early 20th centuries.What is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fit¬ting lenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. 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IL 60201 2566 N. Clark St.. Chicago. IL 606J 4hbw Comity Seat)864-4441 880-5400 Guests and friends are welcome to each of these special programs.ADAMS SEAFOODEMPORIUM6454 S. Cottage Grove Ave."FRESH FISH DAILY!"IntroducesALL NIGHT LONG DELIVERIESeveryTHURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY10a.m.-6a.m.MONDAY, TUESDAY, and WEDNESDAY10 a.m. -1 a.m.SUNDAYS12 Noon -12 MidnishtTRY OUR: “BIG JUICY JUMBO SHRIMP"“MOUTH-WATERING PERCH""DELICIOUS CATFISH & BUFFALO"AND MANY MOREDELIVERY SERVICE DAY & NIGHT241-7028, 29MORNING, NOON, EVENING, AND LATE, LATE, NIGHT OWLDELIVERIES10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14. 1983rsiOctober 14,1983 • 16th Year(Verbatim from Chicago Record-Herald, March 10, 1905, page one.)JOY AT A “Dope” PARTYProf. Starr Entertains Midway Students With Mexican Jag Producer.MARIHUANA IS THE NAMEMicrocephalic Idiot and a Human Freak Help Toward a Happy Evening.Professor Frederick Starr, the versatile Midway anthropologist, has achieved the “dopeparty’’. He held one last night for his students, and those who were admitted to the revel pro¬nounce it by far the best and raciest of all the professor’s innovations. Dr. Starr’s latest discov¬ery, the wonderful Mexican jag producer, which may revolutionize the present methods of intox-ification, received a thorough tryout, the only rivals being the skull of a microcephalic idiot, and areal live freak of nature.The party was the professor’s first opportunity to test effectually the virtues or vices of themarihumana, whose “tanglefoot’’ properties he revealed to science two weeks ago.ORIGINAL “DOPE PARTY”For the exploitation of the anthropological cigarette, Professor Starr was informed that hisentertainment would be recorded in Midway chronicles as the original “dope party”. Fully half ofthe fifty students present sampled the fumes of the weed. The others, mostly girls, declared thataccording to their belief the marihumana was no better than ordinary tobacco for all its fancyname, and declined to indulge. Those who smoked declared they saw double, and that their legsbecame wobbly.As to the freak, whose particular attraction was a superfluity of fingers and thumbs, he wasquite outshone by the skull of the dead and gone microcephalic idiot.Professor Starr explained that the microcephalic had been the most unfortunate of men in thathis head was very thick, thicker even than that of his dullest pupil. The osseous tissue of hiscranium, moreover, had shown a tendency to grow according to its own sweet will, with the pa¬thetic result that it had reached its present humble position as a parlor entertainer.Of course Professor Starr showed his collection of plaster casts, which numbers something morethan a thousand heads and busts, but that is mere incident, for they have participated in justexactly ninety-one of Professor Starr’s parties. But they had never before been to a “dopeparty” along with a microcephalic and a freak.ORDERS THE ICE CREAMThe professor repeated his explanation of the “only true origin of the American Indian and thehairy Ainu,” and then ordered up ice cream. In all his ninety-one parties Professor Starr neverhas forgotten the ice cream, for he believes it is the very nicest thing to eat he knows of.Four daring students, who thought the same thing, stole the ice cream from his eighty-ninthparty, and so great was his disappointment and rage at the theft of his favorite delicacy thatthey were forced to leave the university.The “dope party” was held in Haskell Museum, the home of the Midway divinity school, and theassorted plaster criminals and abnormalities have witnessed many a ridiculous incident sincethey began attending the anthropological revels of their keeper.It was way back at number sixty-six, just after Professor Starr had been adopted into a tribeof South American Indians, that a timid co-ed fainted from fright when the professor realisticallyrecalled some of his hair-raising experiences among the savages. Again, two years ago, atnumber eighty-three, a very fleshy girl was thrown into convulsions when he made his startlingprofession in favor of cannibalism.The above selection appeared in the Chicago Record-Herald on March 10, 1905, on the frontpage. Now I suppose an institution, like a person, may be dulled by time. Perhaps there are noprofessors like Starr anymore, and perhaps the “dope party” as a student-professor meetinghas become the more sedate, boring, and respectable sherry hour. Still, this little excursion intohistory reveals a sad emptiness, a sense of something lost.Sure, we can revel in the knowledge that dope parties originated, like urban sociology and theatomic bomb, at the University of Chicago. We can even write home about it, so that moms anddads can add it to the list of facts used to explain the preeminence of a university that no one hasheard of. “Well, it was founded by John D. Rockefeller, has entertained 53 Nobel Prize winners,has a better curriculum than any Ivy League, invented atomic power, concentric circles, and thepot party.” Maybe now the neighbors will be impressed.So where have all the flowertops gone?—Vince MichaelmNOW AT COPYWORKSVIRGILTHE AENEIDROBERT FITZGERALD TRANSLATIONWILLIAM C. SEITZABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISTPAINTING IN AMERICASEMINARY COOP BOOKSTORE5757 S. UNIVERSITY Jlllflll E6ZDLNDINSTANT CASSETTECOPYING SERVICEFAST 30. 60. 90 or 120 MINUTES TAPES COPY A ONE HOURCASSETTE IN LESS THAN 2 MINUTESINEXPENSIVE OUR REMARKABLY LOW COST INCLUDES A COPYCASSETTE AND SERVICEMIRROR PERFECT YOU'LL GET GUARANTEED PERFECTMONAURAL COPIES OR YOUR MONEY BACKWhat can you copy? Just about anything includinglectures, seminars, languages, labs, meetings, college classes,sermons, sales messages, weddings, interviews, talking letters,word processing data, and computer programsCome in for our $1.00 OFF Introductory CouponCOPYWORKS, LtdThe Copy Center in Harper Court288-2233INTRODUCTORYMEETING!MONDAYOCTOBER 178:00 p.m.Academic Quiz CompetitionIda Noyes Hall LibraryQuestions?Call Mike Day at 684-8217 AUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCHSundays - 8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.SERMON & EUCHARIST6:30 p.m.SUPPER ($2 per person)Tuesday, October 18EUCHARIST -5:30 p.m.PIZZA SUPPER ($2 per person) - 6:00 p.m.Followed by CAROL PERLMAN:“Stress and Coping”Thursday, October 20MORNING PRAYER & BREAKFAST7:30 a.m.5500 S. Wood lawn - 493-6452CAN YOU BUY GOOD TASTE?Yes! Now you can acquire good taste for a words and alligators have good taste,couple of bucks. Just wear shirts and visors So, order your kind of good taste in Dosthat say “Dos Equis” After all, those Equis sportswear today. And remember toare foreign words. And anyone in college eat your peanut butter and jelly sand-knows people who wear stuff with foreign wiches over the sink. r<M° ■0-< QO-O •=22=5r—I cX •°CD -oO © §Q-’ oT (0- c goo i2£ E ^_ OO o at/).* O50^o-S -wg .22l/lr, (UO? <D^0)00- CO <S)O •*^0 dT3 •—I >C c\l CDCD fv. JZCO CTi o-• c-§TO S. 5Eqoo> c.O 6 3oJT3.£-O C cw CTJ • =O EOQ-09- ■Dc00c5oJZua—rsE <nn <raCDc </>J= tu(A tO) a,>- +*tore npka-* a-> a-> a—1 a->o a a a aa) CD 07 CD CDN NI N N N00 CO 00 CO CO■0-0X3Cl) CD CDcr pc oc'o5 'o ~a>F— CD jr£OOOOOlo m o o md no nof A f A / A / A / /nvTT tzT XTT XTT tTT£ *aj "to ^ "coCO 3IIj^THEUNCOMMON in c 2=cu 3 oCD GO ODOS EQUISTHE UNGOMMOnWoRLC 1983 Cantcari* Moctuumt. S A2—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALlook of a man who knows he is not assuave as he is putting on. Fri Oct 14at 7, 9, and 11. DOC. $2.50 —JMKing of Hearts (Phillip de Broca, 1967)parodies the senselessness of wag¬ing war by contrasting it with lifeamong the insare. De Broca sup¬ports the notion hat the insane sac¬rifice productivity and freedom fora gentler, more creative approachto human relatiors But when grant¬ed freedom the insane toy with ituntil everyone’s fantasies comealive, only to reject this modernbasis of “freedom” which carries™with it the obligation to fight wars.Fri Oct 14 at 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Inter¬national House. $2. — BTGandhi (Richard Attenborough, 1982)You knew him, you loved him — theman brought civil disobedience to anation chained by British coloniali¬sm. Along the way, the Mahatmagrooved peacefully with Nehru,Lord Mountbatten, MargaretBourke-White, and Martin Sheen.Director Richard Attenborough(whose fondling of his Oscar while onnational TV we all remember sowell) has made the first real Britishepic since Lawrence of Arabia, al¬though this movie would never hadworked without tne brilliant perfor¬mance of Ben Kingsley as the G-manhimself. SPECIAL NOTE: Gandhi willbe shown in Quantrell Auditorium(Cobb) and not in Mandel Hall as pre¬viously announced. New Show Timesare: Sat, Oct 15 at 6:45 and 10:00.and Sun Oct 16 at 8:30 (Sundayshow will be in the Law School Audi¬torium.) DOC/LSF $2.50. -JMCoup de Torchon i3ertrand Tavernier,1982) This black comedy by thedirector of A Week's Vacation tellsthe story of a corrupt police chief’smurdurous plan to clean up his dila¬pidated crime-infested colonial Afri¬can village. Philippe Noiret is theslovenly, morally-bankrupt ChiefCordier, Stephane Audran is his cau-sualty adulterous wife, and IsabelleHupert is his seductive, deceitfulmistress. Coup de Torchon is a total¬ly unconventional comedy of man¬ners and murder. Sun Oct 16 at 8:00.DOC. $2. -MKHome From The Hill (Vincenti Minnelli,1960) In his finest film, Vincenti Min¬nelli tells the story of an affluentSouthern family — an American Bri-deshead Revisited set against abackground of Faulkneresquedecay. Robert Mitchum stars as alandowner with a voracious sexualappetite who clashes with his wifeover their two sons — one legiti¬mate, the other not. Amid the twist¬ed secrets and blazing mise-en-sceneof Minnelli’s backwoods, the twobrothers nakedly contend for theirbloodstained birthright. Wow. Rob¬ert Mitchum rides again. Mon, Oct17 at 8:00. DOC. $2 —JMNever Say Never Again. James Bond is back, in the person of Sean Connery,in this terrific entertainment whichjust may be the best 007 adventureyet. The humor and suspense areblended with a sure hand by direc¬tor Irvin Kershner (The EmpireStrikes Back), with Connery at iswry best as a Bond coming to termswith late middle-age. Never SayNever Again also features KarlMaria Brandauer (Mephisto) as oneof the smoothest guys the superspyhas ever come up against — at last atruly worthy opponent for 007: withBarbara Carrera, Kim Basinger.Alec McCowen, and the ubiquitousMax von Sydow. McClurg Court andothers. —MKARTFans Massive display of local talent.Thru Nov 6 at the Hyde park ArtCenter, 1701 E 53rd. Tue-Sat. 11-5.324-5520. Free.New Image/Pattern and Decorationfrom the Morton G. Neumann FamilyCollection. Thru Dec 4 at the SmartGallery, 5550 Greenwood. Tue-Sat,10-4: Sun, 12-4. 753-2123. FreeJohn Knight Museotypes. Sixty chinaplates, each bearing the regal blueimage of one of 60 international artmuseums. One thinks the catalogueessay by Anne Rorimer correctlyidentifies the intention: “In Museo¬types Knight fuses various visual,but specifically non-art traditions inorder to question and revalidatecontemporary art practice.’’ But al¬though the sphere Knight breaksopen has a real physical aspect it ismore importantly mental. It existspsychologically in very differentways for different audiences, name¬ly art-goers on one hand and every¬body else on the other. The formergroup has seen art shattered timeafter time: with photography. Cu¬bism, Surrealism, Abstract Expres¬sionism, Pop, etc. And the lattergroup, those supposedly with themost to gain from such a shattering(for instance, Surrealism's claim thatlife is art and everybody is an ar¬tist), has v neither understood thepoint nor reaped the supposed ben¬efit. Art remains the sphere of spe¬cialists; its contemporary self-criti¬cism has not been reflected by thegeneral public’s reappropriation ofit. Knight does not choose this situa¬tion but it nevertheless situates hisproduct. Rorimer tor instancestresses the connection betweenthese unique plates and actual,mass-produced, low- or non-art com¬memorative plates. This observa¬tion is not wrong, but it is particularto the discourse of art. A lay ob¬server might sooner ask “Has any¬one ever eaten off these plates ’ or"How do museums taste?” Further,Continual on pag* tTHEATERMelva Williams and Brent Jennings in A Raisin in The Sun at the Goodman.Methusalem Germany was, during theearly part of the 20th century, a dy¬namic center of creative innovationin the visual, musical, and dramaticarts. A movement towards artisticanti-traditionalism flourished in theschool of Expressionism, a compre¬hensive creative philosophy thatdealt a death blow to realism as thenorm in art. Some of the greatestnames of artistic modernism — Kan¬dinsky, Hindemith, Brecht-were ofthis period.A lesser known name of the periodis that of Yvan Goll, a poet and play¬wright of great expressionists incli¬nation and great obscurity. Rarelytranslated and even more rarelyperformed in his drama of bour-geoise decadence, Methusalem.Also being performed on the pro¬gram is Sham, written by FrankTompkins. This is another piece fromthe early twenties, the action hererevolving around an upper classAmerican family being robbed by aburglar who loves to wait aroundand criticize the people who he isrobbing. This is a student product¬ion, and as such, deserves your sup¬port. Oct 14-15 and 21-23 at 8PM.Concrete Gothic, Reynolds Club. Stu¬dents, $2, Others. $3.The Forever War: Joe Haldeman’s 1975Hugo award-winning science fictionnovel is brought to the stage in thisworld premiere production by theOrganic Theater. The Forever Warpostulates a future where hetero¬sexuality is almost extinct, and hu¬mankind is at war with the Tavrans,an enemy they have never seen.Seen in preview, the play’s narra¬tive flow was still a bit sluggish, butall the performances were good andthe special effects first-rate. Oct 18— Nov 13, previews through Oct 16.$10-$14. Organic Theater Company3319 N Clark. 327-5588 —MKSecond City The new Second Cityrevue, Orwell That Ends Well, is hereand it’s a pretty good one. Amongthe highlights are a city councilmeeting that turns into The Piratesof Penzance, a musical sketch on therewards of the artist’s life (featur¬ing the song “Money and Bread’’with the chorus, “My muse gave methe blues ’til I got paid and laid”)and a scene in heaven, in which Godtries to break it as gently as poss¬ible to a defiantly atheistic Jean-Paul Sartre that he was all wrongthis time. Also good is a skit in whichpassengers are terrorized by an outof control CTA driver. They arethrown off a Chicago bus by thedriver whenever they mispronouncesuch Windy City landmarks asGoethe Street and Comiskey Park.The energy of the six-member castcan’t be denied, and the audienceseems to have as good a time asthey do. Tue Wed Thur Sun at 9 $6;Fri 8:30 & 11 $7; Sat 8:30 & 11$7.50; Second City 1616 N Wells,337-3992. —MKHay Fever written by Noel Coward,directed by Susan Dafoe. This playtakes place in the eccentric Blisshousehold. Like all of Coward’swork, it is a very amusing Englishdrawing room comedy. Wed thru Satat 8, Sun 2:30 and 7:30. Court The¬ater 5535 S Ellis Ave 753-4472.$10-13 with a $2 student discount.A Raisin in the Sun written by LorraineHansberry, directed by Tom Bullard.The story of a struggling black fami¬ly on the south side of Chicago in theearly '50s. The play returns to Chi¬cago in this production celebratingits 25th anniversary. Wed and Thurat 7:30, Fri-Sun at 8:00, Sun matineeat 2:00, special student matinees onWed Oct 19 and 26 at noon. Good¬man Theater, 200 S Columbus Dr formore info 443-3800.In the Belly of the Beast: Letters fromPrison adapted from a book by JackHenry Abbott, directed by RobertFalls, the artistic director of WisdomBridge. Wed thru Fri at 8, Sat at 6and 9:30 and Sun at 3 and 7:30. Wis¬dom Bridge Theater, 1559 W Huron743-6442. $11-13.The Unnamedadapted from The Hunterof the Dark by H.P. Lovecraft direct¬ed by Michael Fosberg. Special low-priced previews Sept 12-14, opensSept 15. All shows are at 8 PM. Stu¬dent discounts available. Huron The¬ater 1608 N Wells. 266-7055. $7and 9.The Hothouse written by HaroldPinter, directed by Jeff Perry. Tuesthru Fri at 8, Sat at 6 and 9:30, Sunat 3 and 7. Steppenwolf Theater,2851 N Halsted, 472-4515.$11.50-15.The Dresser written by Ronald Har¬wood, directed by Pauline Brails- ford. Thurs and Fri at 7:30, Sat at5:30 and 9, Sun at 2:30 and 7:30.Body Politic Theater, 2261 N LincolnAve., 348-7901. $9-13 with an addi¬tional student discount.MISCHyde Park/Kenwood in Literature1892-1982 This exhibit, as it was atthe Blackstone Libary last week, ;san amateurish effort — some photo¬graphs and clippings pasted ontooaktag, and a display of abouttwenty books. Built around a seriesof articles which, I eventually rea¬lized, were taken from the Maroon,the exhibit doesn’t take its subjectany further than the range of the ar¬ticles. But at best it provides a com¬prehensive list of Hyde Universi¬ty/Hyde Park fiction from the past90 years. It is a surprisingly largecollection of boosk, from Samanthaat the World’s Fair through a murdermystery by Edgar J. Goodspeed (ofGoodspeed Hall) to Saul Bellow's re¬cent The Dean’s December. Part ofthe Write On, Chicago festival.Opens Sat Oct 15 at the Hyde ParkHistorical Society, 5529 Lae ParkAve, phone H: MUseum 3-1893.Weekends only, Sat 10-12, Sun 2-4.Free. —AAMUSICRichard Thompson No one seems toknow for sure, but he is preceded byan impressive reputation. Formerlyof Fairport Convention; formerly ofRichard and Linda Thompson. Did hejump or was he pushed? Fri Oct 14 at8 and 11. Tuts.Peter Allen A completely talentlessperformer. Fri Oct 14 and Sat Oct 15at 8. Park West. 929-5959.Chicago Symphony Orchestra Violin so¬loist Kyung-Wha Chung performsconcertos by Berg and Bartok. Alsoon the program are works by Bachand Wagner. Fri Oct 14 and Sat Oct15 at 8. Orchestra Hall. 435-8111.$9-$25.Tropicana Music Bowl The suspense willbe undoubtedly be unbearable asthousands of marching bands fromIllinois, Indiana, and Michigan viefor a chance to compete in the 1984National Championship. I’ve heardDrum Corps is more exciting, but you can’t always get what you want. SatOct 15, all day long. Soldier Field,McFeteridge and S Lake Shore Drs.$5; $2 students.Liberace In case you miss Peter Allen,there’s always Liberace. Oct 16 at 3and 7:30. Rialto Square Theatre inJoliet — where else? A mere $19.50-$22.50.Victoria Mullova The 1982 winner of theTchaikovsky Competition and a re¬cent Soviet defector to boot willmake her U.S. debut with a programof Bach, Brahms, Prokofiev, and Pa¬ganini. Sun Oct 16 at 3. AuditoriumTheatre, 70 E Congress Parkway,922-2110. $4-$15.Soft Cell They had a really big hitawhile ago, but what have theydone recently? Mon Oct 17 at 7:30.Park West. 929-5959.Noontime Concert Series will featurebaritone Bruce Tammer in a recitalof songs by Grieg, Faure, Sibelius,Poulenc, Rorem and Ives. Thur Oct20 at 12:15. Goodspeed Recital Hall.Free!DANCEMoMing Nana Sobrig and the ChicagoMoving Company present works bycompany members and by Solbrig.MoMing, 1034 V Barry, 472-9894.Fri Sat and Sun Jet 14, 15, 16, 21, 22and 23 at 8:30. $6Bella Lewitzky ”i. jllaborations: NewDance/New Music”: premieres ofworks and music commissioned bythe Dance Center. The Dance Centerof Columbia College, 4730 N Sheri¬dan Rd, 271-7804. Fri and Sat oct14, 15, 21 and 22 at 8. $8. $6 stu¬dents.Martha Graham Company A weekendof performances dating from 1943to 1983. Auditorium Theatre, 70 ECongress Parkway, 922-2110. FriOct 21 and Sat Oct 22 at 8, Sun Oct23 at 3. $5-$22.50 at the theatre orthru Ticketron.FILMOctopussy (John Glen. 1983) Eventhough Sean Connery is back asJames Bond, one should not over¬look Roger Moore's distinctivebrand of Bondage. Face it: Connerywas pure Sixties, which meant thateven though he was pop-art, he tookhimself seriously. Moore, on theother hand, is pure Seventies (andnow Eighties), meaning that hedoesn't take himself seriously at all.This is not to say that Octopussy is acondescending entertainment; farfrom it. But most of the charm in thisfilm comes from the pleasurederived from seeing Roger Mooreever-so-suavely walk through' thestandard Bond sti.p3 — i.e. sex, vio¬lence, saving the world — with theGrey City Journel 10/14/83Staff: Steven Diamond, Pat Finegan, Jonathon Katz, Jae-Ha Kim, Lor¬raine Kenny, Michael Kotze, Madeline Levin, Jeffrey Makos, NadineMcGann, David Miller, John Probes, Cassandra Smithies, Ken Wis-sokerProduction: Nadine McGann, David MillerAssociate Editors: Abigail Asher, Stephanie BaconEditors. Jesse Halvorsen, Brian MulliganTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—3ANOTHER NAME“Grandma Newton”, my mother saidwhen she saw the slickless fadedphotograph I had uncoveredtrying to fill the coffin’s face.A pocket Polaroid, washed outbrown and white on creased whitemounting board. They stare out.Three faces strangled in the leaves.Unhappy fat faces buncedwith rotting pumpkins in a sectionof a fall garden. Welt posedfaces, eyes white with questionsthat I cannot answer. Ido not know myself and can onlyimagine the clumsy tripod contraptionin the hands of their father. A manwho scattered leaves carefully,imagining imagining our generationthough he could never seepast his daughter’s frustration.Their faces are flushed by the weather,flushed with fear. They stare downthrough the years of my conjectureswith an impassive distance of their own.“Yes, I remember,” but so hollowly,and wrong. I wanted another name,mother’s mother and only culleda dirty picture, unscarred, unscratched, framed.—David Sullivano°o°o°o°o2o°o2o°o°o°o°oo2o2o9o°o°o£o°o9o2o?o!o:o“o“o:o^o:ouo“oro' [O^OnOXOnO;Continued from page 3both of these questions might leaddirectly to a point similar to that at¬tributed by Rorimer to Knight, eventhough the specialist would laugh atthem. But such lay questionings willnever revolutionize art, let alonelife. For this to happen these need tobe stated at the same time as similarquestions about other culturalspheres; art is a part of life but can¬not change life alone. It will changedramatically when life changes dra¬matically, not before. Thru Nov 19at the Renaissance Society, fourthfloor Cobb, 5811 Ellis. Tue-Sat, 10-4;Sun, 12-4.-962-8670. free. —DMAlfred Stieglitz The 170-piece NationalGallery retrospective opens Tue Oct18 at the Art Institute, Michigan atAdams. Thru Jan 3: Mon-Wed, Fri,10:30-4:30; Thur, 10:30-8; Sat, 10-5;Sun, 12-5. 443-3500. Admission dis¬cretionary except Thur, free.The Armed Vision Disarmed: RadicalFormalism from Weapon to Style.Slide Lecture by Abigail Solomon-Godeau, who authoried a piece ofthe same title in Afterimage earlierthis year it attempted to accountfor the complete change in use andthus meaning of photographic for¬malism, from politically engagedRussian artists after the Revolution,through the Dessau Bauhaus, to the"New Bauhaus” established by Mo¬holy-Nagy in Chicago in the late’30s, and subsequently to the strongeffect of the debased "Bauhaus" style upon American art photo¬graphy in the ’50s and '60s. In short,the history of a style. Wed Oct 19 at3 in rooms 211-12 of the School ofthe Art Institute, Columbus at Jack-son. 443-3710. FreeArt Under Stress Panel discussion mo¬derated by Robert Berlind, artistand critic, between: Dennis Adrian,local critic and collector; Leon Golub,painter; Barbara Kruger, photo col-lagist and critic; and Peter Plagens,artist and critic. Title and selectionof panelists suggest that the ques¬tion of the relation between art andpolitics will come up; the articulateand not infrequently outrageousAdrian might easily meet his matchin either Golub or Kruger, or both.Somewhat beyond family fun. ThurOct 20 at 7 in the Columbus Drive Au¬ditorium, School of the Art Institute.443-3710. $3; $2, students.Danny Lyon Upstairs from the “Consi¬dering Beauty in Photography"mess, a small showing of black andwhite photography wholly worthseeing. Both close tomorrow at Co¬lumbia College, 600 S Michigan.Today, -5; tomorrow, 12-5.663-1600 ext 104. Free.Louise Bourgeois The MOMA retro¬spective; thru Oct 30 at the Museumof Contemporary Art, 237 E Ontario.Tue-Sat, 11-5; Sun, 12-5. 280-2660.$2; $1, students; except Tue, free.Peter Joseph Abstract painting. ThruJan 1 at the MCA; info above.Naomi Vine, director of Education,MCA, will speak on "InterpretingContemporary Art” on Thur Oct 20at 5:30 at the MCA; info above. $15;$10, students. ®Semaphore Signs from seven. Opens ctonight, 5-7, at N.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 uTW Hubbard. Thru Nov 12: Tue-Sat, jj11-5. 467-6550. Free. >First Beat Last Performance by musi- Ecian Eddie Mason and painter and |£ sculptor Ray Silbersdorf in which theartists "examine oppositional con¬cepts and their structures." Take achance. Tonight and tomorrow at7:30 and 9 at ARC Gallery/RawSpace, 6 W. Hubbard. 266-7607. $3.Talking to a Man This Middle Gallery in¬stallation by Anita David uses a soundtrack and slides, mainly, to de¬scribe the scary prospect of imposs¬ible communication between anAmerican female and an Egyptianmale. It is unfortunately the stron¬gest of the Gallery's current shows;the only possible competition is of¬fered by Barbara Ciurej and Lindsay Lochman’s black and white photos.These are pretty dry, and culminatein a series of four prints titled "Manof the World." In the first a manpries open a door; the second showsa naked woman with a globe for ahead floating in space; the third, theman carrying the woman out; andthe last a globe-headed child in acrib. All this in a dark and glitterymanner, as though such a turn ofevents were unusual or worth emu¬lating. By their association with thisgallery one suspects the artists in¬tended the opposite, but a numberof comments last Friday indicatedthat any sort of critical perspectivewas missed. But at least this is inter¬esting, which is more than can besaid for the other current showingsof paintings and paintings and sculp¬tures. Thru Oct 29 at Artemisia Gal¬lery, 9 W Hubbard. Tue-Sat, 11-5.751-2016. Free. —DM5 Boston Artists Opens tomorrow, 6-9,at Randolph Street Gallery, 756 NMilwaukee. Thru Nov 19: Tue-Sat,1 1 -5. 666-7737. Free. Perfor¬mance/installation tomorrow, 6-9,by one of the five. Alex Grey: "TheLiving Cross,” about which the artiststates "Most of my recent perfor¬mances seem like victim nightmares.Some of them contain sparks ofhope, but most are just elaboratedespair.” $1%Nancy Spero "Notes on Women inTime,” in which the artist shows upthe sexism of the ages. Thru Nov 3 atRhona Hoffman Gallery, 215 W Su¬perior. Tue-Fri, 10-5:30; Sat,11-5:30. 951-8828 Free.The Berlin Wall A huge and powerfuldrawing by Zita Sodeika, 8 feet by84 feet of emotion and political in¬sight brought to life by this expa¬triated Lithuanian. Thru Oct 29 atGalerija, 226 W Superior. Tue-Fri,10-4:30; Sat, 10-2. 280-1149. FreeJohn Knight "Art Institute”, plate #38 of 604—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALDOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOCIFRIDAY:John Glen'sOCTOPUSSYStarring Roger Mooreat 7, 9, and 11 SATURDAY:Richard Attenborough'sGANDHIStarring Ben Kingsleyat 6:45 and 10SUNDAY: Additional Show at the Law School at 8:30 SUNDAY:Bernard TaverniersCOUPE DE TORCHONat 8All Shows in Cobb Hall, 5811 S. Ellis - Admission $8 ($2.50 Friday & Saturday) - 962-8574THAI 55*RESTAURANTAWE SERVETHE BEST THAI FOODIN TOWNOpen 12 noon-10 p.m.7 DAYS A WEEK MAROON962-9555\ v.vv!v vi:: :W: ::::: >v :g :% X g:j\ Xv!v! ••••••! !v! V* lyl X X X Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 E. 53rd St.493-8372Intelligent people know thedifference between advertisedcheap glasses or contact lensesand competent professionalservice with quality material.Beware of bait advertising.Eye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact Lenses1607 E. 55th St.363-7119NEWPaperbacksRichard NixonThe Shaping of his CharacterFawnM.Brodie“An absolutely brilliant book, packed withfresh material, vividly written and exciting toread.” - — Irving Wallace$8 95 IllustratedNotable AmericanWomenThe Modem PeriodBarbara Sicherman andCarol Hurd Green, EditorsPrepared under the auspices ofRadcliffe College“A superb biographical dictibnary.”Belknap $ 12.95 Illustrated —NewsweekPrejudicesA Philosophical DictionaryRobert Nisbet"If you have a friend whose intellect youdeeply respect, this is the gift."$6.95 —Boston GlobeThe ImperiousEconomyDavid P. Calleo"Elegant, thoughtful,and resolutelyindependent... It challenges all readers,whatever their intellectual biases or politicalaffiliations, to re-examine their fundamentalassumptions.”$7.95 — Washington Post Book WorldAmerican PoliticsThe Promise ofDisharmonySamuel P. Huntington"An exceptional book... that will challengeand inform any reader interested in theAmerican experience."Belknap $6.95 - Boston GlobeThe United Statesand ChinaFourth Edition, Revised and EnlargedJohn King Fairbank"An indispensable book for thoughtfulpeople/’ _ New York Times Book Review$7 95 IllustratedHarvard University PressCambridge, Massachusetts 02138 There’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 $50.00valueONLY $24.95hair performers1621 PEN 7 DAYSQlE. 55th St. 241-77781THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—5ASHUM Seminar Series 1983 64Tke Program in the Liberal Arts anA SciencesBasic to Human Biology andMahcwepresents a lecture awHerberc Spencer Vindicated*Social Thought andrhe Evolution of MoralitybyRobert RichardsProfessor: Htsrory, BckavioralScicnccsSc ConcepcxuiL foundstcums of ScienceThursday, October 20,19637:30 p.m. wt Harper 10314 // interested persons are Invited to attendThere will be a receptions with the speakerin Harper ZSf following tke lectureUniversity NightSeriesSponsoredby theJuniorGoverningBoardSIR GEORG SOLTIMusic DirectorCLAUDIO AfiBADOPrincipal Quest ConductorNavarro andOrchestra intriumphaltour encore!SaturdayOctober 22 • 8PMGarcia NavarroConductorDvorakSymphony Mo. 8HarrisSymphony Mo. 3RavelDaphnisetChloe,Suite Mo. 2 Ticket InformationPrices:$14, $11, $9, $6, $5Phone Charge435-6666Orchestra Hall Box Office220 South Michigan Ave.Chicago, IL 60604435-8111Students must presentcurrent ID or proofof registration INTERNATIONAL® NEWSSTANDSSERVING CHICAGO SINCE 1965OPEN EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR3000U.S. AND FOREIGN PERIODICALSMANY HARDTO-FIND PUBLICATIONSPOSTERS • POSTCARDS - PAPERBACKS3000SENSITIVE AND SIZZLING GREETING CAROS| And at Bob's, when you buy5 cards, you get n you buy \1 FREE JCHICAGO LOCATIONS • ALL OPEN LATEHYDE PARKSlat A LAKE PARKNEWTOWNCLARK & OtVERSEY NEAR NORTHCLARK A DIVISION684-5100 943-1977ROGERS PKDEVON & BROAOWAY883-1123 743-1444CHEAP CIGARETTES!RESOURCESAt Intel, we provide professionals with the tools and access to management neededto get the |ob done. As a result, over th$ years we have set records for sales,productivity and management efficiency. This formula works.ENVIRONMENTOur company Is a place where achievers thrive. Through open communications,we give talented men and women the freedom and support to try new ideasBy doing so. we have been able to attract some of the top achievers in our industry.NEW COLLEGE GRADUATESTo continue to grow, we must attract more achievers with inquiring mindsand degrees in Business, Accounting. Finance, and Technical Marketing.We offer business challenges and advancement based on achievement inTexas. Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, and California.INTELCAMPUS INTERVIEWSOCTOBER 26-27,1983Meet with our recruiters and learn how you can make the Intel formula work tor youIf you are unable to meet with us. please send your resume outlining your career goalsin care of "INTEL COLLEGE RELATIONS' to the location of your choice:Anzona: 5000 West Williams Field Road. Chandler. AZ 85224;California; P.O. Box 3747, Santa Clara. CA 95051;New Mexico: 4100 Sara Road, Rio Rancho. NM 87124:Oregon: 5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway. JF1-1-149. Hillsboro. OR 97123;Texas 12675 Research Blvd Austin. TX 78766An Equal Opportunity Employer M F/HIntel winnersby designg FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALAVOID DEATH AND HOLOCAUSTBy Hilary Till and Mike BoothA very dramatic, influential movie cur¬rently making the rounds in classrooms,meeting halls, churches, and temples is IfYou Love This Planet. This movie was la¬belled as foreign propaganda by the U.S.State Department. Recently screened atthe Hyde Park Jewish Community Center(JCC), the documentary on the probableconsequences of a nuclear war/holocaust isquite effective. After seeing this film, oneis initially stunned into silence and then itwould not be unusual to think, “Where canI get off this planet? I could be va¬porized.”Given the effectiveness of the movie, itis still not without its faults. It is exceed¬ingly informative; it presents the knownfacts and the medical and military theorieson the destructiveness of nuciear war. Yetthe movie often strays from known factsand accepted theories and indulges in ex¬hortations, cheap shots, debatable histori¬cal interpretations, - and questionablefacts.The body of factual information Dr.Helen Caldicott, the narrator of the film,presents is enormous. She reports the fol¬lowing facts and theories:• A single twenty-megaton nuclearbomb is four times as destructive as all thebombs used in World War II.• The explosion of a twenty-megatonbomb would create a crater a half-milewide. Humans within a six-mile radius ofthe crater would be vaporized, turned intogas. Most people within a twenty-mile ra¬dius, would die or be mortally injured.Anyone looking in the direction of theflash within fourteen miles of the explod¬ed bomb would be instantly blinded. Ev¬erything flammable within 3,000 miles ofthe explosion would ignite.• After the explosion of a twenty-mega¬ton bomb, there would be millions ofcorpses. Bacteria on the rotting corpseswould multiply raoidly. Those still alivewould have limited immunity from variousdiseases because much of their white bloodcell population would die from the radioac¬tive fallout. There would then be epidem¬ics of many diseases we now control be¬cause of the survivors’ impairedimmunity.• With the release of certain gases dur¬ing the explosion of a twenty-megatonbomb, much of the ozone in the upper at¬mosphere of large parts of the globewould be destroyed. Those survivors liv¬ing in areas where the ozone is destroyedwould probably get third degree burnsfrom the sun.• With the detonation of hydrogenbombs, enough of the ozone would be de¬stroyed to cause the blindness of every or¬ganism on earth.• If a one-megaton bomb was droppedon a nuclear reactor, a land mass the sizeof West Germany would be contaminatedwith radioactivity.• Even if a person had enough warningbefore the bombs started dropping andgot to a fallout shelter in time, one wouldstill probably be pressure cooled in theshelter.• And even if a person survived the ex¬plosion of nuclear bombs in the shelter,one could not reemerge for six to eightweeks because of the radioactive fallout.• A hundred-megaton could be producedand detonated such that six Westernstates could be destroyed.• The United states has thrity to thirty-five thousand nuclear weapons. The Pen¬tagon estimates that with this nuclear ca¬pacity, the U.S. could overkill every Sovietforty times. This means each Soviet couldbe killed forty times over assuming everyAmerican bomb directed to the SovietUnion was detonated.) The Soviet Unioncould overkill every American twentytimes.• Every American town with a popula¬tion over 25,000 is targeted for nucleardestruction by the Soviet Union.• In the event of nuclear war, at leastninety percent of Americans would bekilled.• The Joint Chiefs of Staff reported in1975 that there is 50/50 chance of nuclearwar occurring by 1985. A Harvard/MITstudy concluded the same.The movie is extremely emotional.Therein lies its biggest strength but alsoits biggest weakness. On the positive sideof the film’s emotionalism, it strips awayall the aseptic Orwellian metaphors whichtend to dominate our thinking on the sub¬ject and lays bare the terrifying self-ex¬termination prospects of nuclear war.After seeing the movie, one will not thinkof a nuclear holocaust as a “nuclear ex¬change” or the MX missile as a “peace¬maker.” Instead, when pondering nuclearwar, one will think of a world devoid ofhuman civilization but complete with star¬vation, sunburn, blindness, epidemics andgrief.On the negative side of the film’s emo¬tionalism, it discourages rational dis¬course on the subject. For example duringthe movie, Caldicott speaks of forming anorganization called Babies Against thePentagon (BAP). Is Caldicott for eradicat¬ing the Defense Department? When theU.S. Senate debates nuclear armament ap¬propriations, Caldicott proposes to re¬ lease hundreds of naked toddlers into theSenate chamber. Of course she is not total¬ly serious, but the point is well made.After being fully horrified by the prospectof nuclear war, one still needs to coolly dis¬cuss defense options, which in 1983 includenuclear armaments. One can be very muchopposed to nuclear war and still carry outan objective, thought-out discussion on thematter.One good example of this can be found inthis year’s Pick lecture, former West Ger¬man Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. Schmidtsaid during his visit at the University ofChicago, “To believe in nuclear war is tobelieve in an idiot’s notion of war.” Butsince nuclear weapons are a fact of life, hehas worked out what the appropiate nu¬clear strategy should be. In his lecture inMandell Hall Monday, he called for nu¬clear parity with the Soviet Union and thestrategy of adequate and credible nuclearresponse. He also called for great relianceon conventional weapons and a de-empha-sis of “fancy” nuclear weapons systemsand for more nuclear limitation treatiesbetween the East and West. Schmidtproves that one can strongly oppose thenuclear arms race and still deal with theissue on an intellectual rather than gutlevel. Which will be more useful and effec¬tive in bringing about the limitation of nu¬clear arms, Caldicott’s exhortations tomarch on Washington with mothers carry¬ing babies (or as she says in the movie, ifyou don’t have a baby, borrow one) orpublicized proposals like Schmidt’s, whichtake into consideration what is possibleand necessary and what isn’t?In the film, Dr. Caldicott discusses sever¬al important, controversial issues. Unfor¬tunately, however, she detracts from herdiscussion by making several misleadingremarks on some of the topics.She discusses, for instance, the nuclearbombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Cer¬tainly, no look at nuclear war would becomplete if it lacked such a discussion. It isthe best source of evidence about the ef¬fects of nuclear weapons. And Dr. Caldicottpresents the facts well. But she errs whenshe suggests that the United States want¬ed to “scientifically test” the effects of nu¬clear weapons on those cities. This is mis¬leading. The true test was at Alamogordo,N.M. Of course scientists collected dataafter the fact, but without that data ourknowledge of the dangers of nuclear warwould be that much poorer. One cannotthink that the cities were destroyed onlyto test the bombs’ effects on people. Nu¬clear weapons were used in the belief thatthey would hasten the end of the war,thereby saving American — and also Japa¬nese — lives. Dr. Caldicott adds that manyJapanese can & could not understand whya second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki.The second, like the first, was used in anattempt to force the Japanese governmentto surrender. Contrary to American hopes,the leaders did not surrender after the de¬struction of Hiroshima. Thus, the second bomb was used in the hope that the lead¬ers might finally give in. One can concludethen that Dr. Caldicott provides importantinformation about the effects of the nu¬clear weapons on the citizens of Hiroshimaand Nagasaki, but her comments on thereasons for the use of the weapons are outof place. It is by no means clear that thedecision to use nuclear weapons was wise:her suggestion about scientific testing,however, does nothing to illuminate therationale behind that decision.Similary, it is well that Dr. Caldicotttalks of nuclear overkill. It is a measure ofthe power of nuclear weapons that Ameri¬can can kill forty times more people thanthe Soviet Union holds. But her remarks onthe overkill capacity are more along thelines of “you can only kill a person once.”The reason behind this capacity is morecomplex than her words imply. It stemsfrom more than a desire to kill the enemytwice. Instead, overkill arises from theneed to be sure that enough weaponswould survive a nuclear attack to permitan effective retaliation. Without this over¬kill capacity, the deterent value of a nu¬clear arsenal is lost, and a first strike isinvited. Thus it has been argued that thelack of an overkill capacity increases therisk of nuclear war. Dr. Caldicott wouldbetter make her point if she explainedthat.Dr. Caldicott also speaks of the hydro¬gen bomb tests of the 1950’s and the de¬velopment of evermore powerful bobms,culminating in the detonation of a fifty-megaton nuclear device (notice the Orwel¬lian term on our part!). But of this test, shesays only that it created such a shockwavethat they never did it again. Perhaps, butshe neglects other more important rea¬sons. First, the practical size limit had beenreached. Weapons larger than twenty-megatons are unnecessary; only a few arethat_ large today. The tests, in short, hadserved their purpose: they had developedthe hydrogen bomb. Second, the growingawareness of the dangers of radioactivefallout led to a curtailment of above¬ground testing, and an eventual ban on allsuch open-air testing Dr. Caldicott wouldbe more informative if she would give thecomplete reasons why the testing stoppedand would explain the treaties behind theban. (And if she wishes to bring home thepoint about the awesome destructive ca¬pability of one nuclear bomb, she mightcomment also on the other end of the sizespectrum; small bombs, only eight inches indiameter, can still destroy a small city.)One further topic which Dr. Caldicotttouches on is missle warning systems, ormore precisely, the fallibility of those sys¬tems. She mentions the many false alarmsthese systems generate. She points outthat some of these false alarms mighthave eventually led to war. In more thanone instance, they led to bombers beingsent aloft to await further orders. She alsomentions that during one such alert, thepresident could not be found. Once again, though, Dr. Caldicott does not present thefull story. An alert, including bombers inthe air, is still several steps from war, de¬spite what the movie Fail Safe might sug¬gest. Before a war can actually be started,more steps would need to be taken. Ulti¬mately, the president must order the at¬tack. Dr. Caldicott also fails to present an¬other side of the warning systemsensitivity issue. The point is that to lessenthe occurrence of false alarms requires aless sensitive system; a system that might,as a result, fail to detect an actual attackbefore it is too late to respond. Clearly,some balance must be struck; perhaps thecurrent system is too sensitive. But that isan issue that Dr. Caldicott unwisely leavesout of her discussion.In discussing all four of these issues: therationale for the bombing of Japan, a nu¬clear strategy, nuclear testing, and missilewarning systems, Dr. Caldicott errs not somuch in discussing these issues as she doesin making them appear too simple, whichmay mislead the moviegoer. It is clear thatshe wished to touch on these topics whileavoiding a lengthy discussion of them, adiscussion which she probably fearedwould have made the film too long. It is un¬fortunate that the film condensed theseissues with an emphasis on their emotionalimpact (consider again the phase “scientif¬ically test”). It is unfortunate indeed thatshe encouraged emotional response torather than calm discussion of these fourissues which are greatly in need of suchdiscussion.Another problem with the film is thecheap shots. This documentary put out bythe National Film Board of Canada doesnot need to rely on such tactics to get itsmessage across; the facts are enough. Forexample, the movie uses clips from a1940's U.S. Department of War Informa¬tion Film featuring a young actor namedRonald Reagan to make digs at the actorturned president. When Caldicott speaksof the overkill capacity of the Soviets andthe Americans, she says this would be typi¬cal of the mentality of a nine-year-old boy.After Caldicott makes this statement, themovie segues right into the clip of theyoung Reagan in a flyer's uniform speak¬ing enthusiastically of war. The movie thencuts back to Caldicott comparing the armsrace to boys fighting in a sandbox overwho has the largest biceps. The implicationof President Reagan being the nine-year-old boy in the sandbox is admittedlyfunny, but hardly appropriate for a docu¬mentary. (Before and after the movie wasshown at the JCC Monday, Robert Cleland,executive director of the Committee for aNuclear Overkill Moratorium, spoke. Hecompared the residents of 1600 Pennsyl¬vania Avenue to the members of the hypo¬thetical Flat Earth Society.)Our last word on the thirty-minute film issee it for the facts on the destructivenessof nuclear war, but draw your own conclu¬sions on how it would be best to limit nu¬clear arms and prevent nuclear war.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983-7LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES CENTERin cooperation withTHE INTERNATIONAL HOUSE SPEAKER SERIESPresentsGuillermo Manuel UngoPRESIDENT ' /OF THERevolutionary Democratic Front of El SalvadorSPEAKING ONPROSPECTS FOR PEACEINEL SALVADORMonday Oct 17 3pmINTERNATIONAL HOUSEASSEMBLY HALL1414 East 59th StreetAdmission free STUDENT GOVERNMENT’SFALL ELECTIONSVACANCIES:UNDERGRADUATE -Freshman (5)Other College (2)GRADUATE - Divinity School (2)Medical School (1)Social Service Administration (1)Humanities (2)Social Science (2)Physical Science (2)CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT:To establish a standingCommittee on Graduate Affairs.POLLING PLACES:Monday, October 17-Cobb, 10:30-1:30Reynolds Club, 11-1Med School, 11-1Law School, 11-1B. School, 11-1Div. School, 12:00-1:30B-J, 5-7Woodward, 5-7Pierce, 5-7Shoreland, 6-8Broadview, 7-9Tuesday, October 18th-Cobb, 10:30-1:30Reynolds Club, 11-1SERAPHIM ►J:HI4XG-60283 SERAPHIM4XG-60175 03 >'«■ SERAPHIM4XG-60271 (I)ALBINONI: ADAGIOPACHELBEL: CANONCORELLI: “CHRISTMAS"CONCERTO MOZART: EINEKLEINE NACHTMUSIKToutovM Chamb•< Orchestra AunecombsBudget price!XDR Quality!Great Artists!$2” EACH3/HO00Sale ends October 28SERAPHIM SERAPHIMCE4XG-60174GERSHWINRHAPSODY IN BLUEAN AMERICAN IN PARIS SERAmiM4XG-60176 CETCHAIKOVSKYSUITES FROM‘THE NUTCRACKER”& “SLEEPING BEAUTY" SERAPHIM4XG-60198okat aa* rican Muirs voc 3COPLAND: ROOEOPOUR DANCE EPISODES) AAPPALACHIAN SPRING (Suite)Robert Irving ConductingThe Concert Art* Orchestra□0 • r ▼SERAPHIM ► < i▲ j kCE4XG-60276HANOELWATER MUSIC& ROYALFIREWORKSSuitesOverture to"SamsonOverture inD minor«oyaiPhiih*r rnonKOchaattaS^eantSERAmiM4XG-60149 CD'*- ,SERAmiM4XG-60195 fTI jae»s*v»V SERAmiMCE <4XG-60177 SERAmiM * •; :1CE4XG-60253SPIN-IT RECORDS >1444 E. 57th Street - 684-1505Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-B p.m.Fri.-Sat. 10a.m.-8:30p.m.Sun. 11 am.-5 p.m.8—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983-THE GREY CITY JOURNALWHY THEMAIL ROOMHATES MEby Gregory WaltersReflections on the New Achievements inReynolds Club: The Mailroom, HutchinsonCommons and Morryland.The Mailroom. The Facts (Biased, slightly)Even with the new generous half week“reading” period at the end of eachquarter, U of C college students are goingto face a new challenge this year in receiv¬ing grades. While hard work, assidiousstuding and butt-kissing in general mayhave worked alone in the past, this yearstudents who desire grades must make anextra effort and physically go out and getthem. What I am talking about is, ofcourse, the new mailroom.University mailings, such as grade re¬ports, that were once sent directly to post¬man to the respective student’s doorstepswill now be tossed, one by one, into utili¬tarian grey folders housed in a dimly litex-billiard room that comprises merely apart of the basement of a particularlygrim and cold building. What I am describ¬ing is, of course, Reynolds Club.What follows is one students reaction tothe above news.With this new outrage, College studentsare thus denied the dignity of direct mail.They must now go and fetch their grades,like peasants. Do graduate students takesuch abuse? I ask you! but wait! What arethe reasons given for this humiliation, thisinsult to the poor college student’s honor?It’s cheaper, they say. Ha! Let them spendmoney on me. Let them spend the extra60c a year. It won’t break their gothicpiggy banks. Do you think that I believethem? That this small cost of preserving astudents honor is a burden too great tobear? That it must be alleviated by sub¬jugating the weary student to yet anotherburacratic runaround?? NO! NO! A thou¬sand times No...Dear reader, even if Hanna Grey, at theend of the quarter, took me to an expen¬sive French restaurant of my choice, andafter our 2nd Chocolate Mousse, wrote outmy grades for that quarter on a wine-stained napkin..weli maybe then-perhaps-I would feel that my efforts as a studentwere being appreciated by the adminis¬tration.Thus to recapitulate the points made inthis essay...No I won't stop here. Moremusf be said.Now I worry about thefts in themailroom. What of mine will be lost tocrime? Perhaps my grades will be takenfrom its cardboard folder and publishedsomewhere, causing me great distress. Iam now nauseous. Friends — My gradesare and should be a source of continuingembarrassment between my professorsand myself. Only! I should not have to takeupon my weary shoulders the added pres¬sure of worrying about the consequencesof their public disclosure.Please. Let me think. Let Me work inpeace. Let me have my grades...by regu¬lar mail!Hutchinson Commons and Morryland —The Facts (again slightly biased)Students returning this fall will notice adramatic change in the interior of Reyn¬olds club. An outsider might look at theclub now and see Morryland, students eat¬ing morry’s food in Hutchinson commons,and most noticably, eager students rush¬ing in and out of the new mailroom, pick¬ing up valuable pieces of university mail¬ings that just aren’t available anywhereelse. This ficticious outsider may look atall of this and say to himself “What does itall mean?”The answer to his question just maycome from a quote taken from a recentissue of The Chicago Chronicle by HermanSinaiko. To quote Mr. Sinaiko, ‘With theremolded Hutchinson Commons dining fa¬cilities, we hope the Reynolds Club willemerge as an informal student center.”What follows is a student’s reaction to theabove.When I am in Hutchinson Commons, I feellike I am on trial. Like my spiritual room¬mate Franz Kafka.I can’t escape this feeling. The entiredecor is oppressive and intimidating. Al¬though the following may strike you ascommonplace, to me these observationsare significant in explaining this feeling ofdread.The tables there are long, black andwooden. They are not relaxing. They arejust like the ones in Harper Library, ex¬cept that Harper's tables' are painted in aparticularly frivolous shade of Brown.The ceiling is much too high. I am made tofeel small and unimportant. I do not feelwell liked by my surroundings.All around me there are numerous large BIG CHIU NEVER HEATS UPby Kerry DolanThe Big Chill is a lavish rip-off of JohnSayles’ film, The Return of the SecaucusSeven. Seven college friends from the1960s reunite for a weekend fifteen yearsafter graduation and wonder where theirlost idealism has gone. They drink coffee,jog, remnisce, rekindle old passions, listento the Temptations. . . and after the end ofthe weekend return to the cold, cruelworld in which they are inevitably sellingout. And what has happened to them as aresult of this presumably significant re¬union? Absolutely nothing.Though the big Chill starts out promis¬ingly enough, it doesn’t go anywhere. Itchooses a potentially interesting subject —how do former radicals come to terms withmaking it in the establishment — yetoffers no new or original insights on this theme, which has been tackled more suc¬cessfully in the past. Lawrence Kasdan,the film’s screenwriter/director whosepast credits include Raiders of the LostArk, The Empire Strikes Back, and BodyHeat, attempts to speak for an entire gen¬eration by relying on cliches and prototy¬pical characters. On board we have theembittered Vietnam vet, the idealistic-journal is t-turned-Peop/e-magaz in e-writ¬er, the disillusioned crusading lawyer. Thecharacters make obligatory references tothe march on Washington, Huey P. Newtonand Bobby Seale, etc., but their days ofpolitical activism remain hazy and unrealas though Kasdan were careful not to of¬fend his audience. We are supposed to be¬lieve, for example, that Tom Berenger,who plays a Tom Sellec-like character whoprostitutes himself on a successful t.v. de¬ tective show, was the leading campus de¬monstrator.This irritatingly blatant use of irony andcynicism pervades the film. The charac¬ters' fortune cookies talk about makingmoney. As the weekend host shows one ofhis friends around his sizely estate, thefriend says, “Remember when we thoughtproperty was a crime?" Okay, Lawrence— we get the message.The virtue of this film lies in its young,talented cast. Jeff Goldblum, an excellentactor who has been conspicuously absentfrom the screen since his performance asthe obnoxious d.j. in Joan Micklin Silver’sfilm, Between the Lines (1977), is wonder¬ful as the conniving journalist, and he addssome sorely needed comic relief to the filmas well. William Hurt, who usuallyoveracts his way through every role, iscomparatively reserved in his perfor¬mance as the Vietnam vet. Mary KayPlace, Glenn Close, Jo Beth Williams, andKevin Kline are all in fine form — it’s apity they are not given better material towork with. The female roles in the film areparticulary confining. Kasdan relies onstereotypes: the woman who’s sacrificedher career for a family (Jo Beth Williams);the successful professional whose only con¬cern now is having a child (Mary KayPlace); and the wonder woman who hassmashingly combined a career as a doctorwith her life as a wife and mother (GlennClose). Oddly enough, Close’s characternever calls in to her office all weekend (theonly evidence we get that she’s a doctor isher comic arrival on the scene with a blackleather bag when one of her houseguestsinjures his arm), and she has maternalwarmth left over to provide all of herguests with some.The Big Chill, regardless of its livelysoundtrack, is a fundamentally depressingexperience. It offers its characters no al¬ternatives to the sacrifice of ideals; of thetwo characters who don’t sell out, one de¬pends on drugs and charitable friends toget by, and the other has already commit¬ted suicide at the start of the film. “It’s acold world out there,” states one of thecharacters. “Yes,” replies another, “some¬times I feel a little frosty myself.” Aftersitting through two hours of The Big Chill,the audience felt a little frosty too.paintings of famous men all of whomseemed to have been captured in oil whenthey were particularly frightening. I seethese old dignified men in their glassframes and I think of the giant portrait ofJohn Marshall in the Supreme Court.Again the image of trial haunts me. Whatcrimes have I commited?The astute reader will pick up from theabove that I don’t think Hutchinson Com¬mons has a relaxed casual atmosphere inwhich students can mix and mingle, en¬gage in stimulating intellectual discus-^sions and generally enjoy college life tothe fullest. In fact the only pleasant thing that I have to say in this piece involvesMorryland.Morryland makes me greedy. I wish thefinancial-aid office was so designed. Needmore be said?Of course those mirrored walls make melong for the great hollywood musicals ofyesteryear. Yeah, for some reason I wantMGM and Warner Brother to film me tapdancing my way through Morryland as Ipurchase an eight cent donut. Wow,Yeah.Plus of course the place is a refreshingchange to those of us who are jaded ofGothic, Mostly freshmen and upperclass¬ men.But now let me put these things in per¬spective. All of the above good thoughtson Morryland are really no more thanpassing fancies and fantasies; thus theyshould be treated as such. They do not con¬tain in them enough to sustain an eveningsentertainment or even conversation. Theyfail to provide a force significant enoughto bind students together much longerthan it takes to consume Morryfood. Westudents are then almost forced to find ourinformal student centers on the partyfloors of various homes and apts. offcampus.Salzburg production of AidaAIDA’S RETURNby Michael KotzeAida is an opera that works. Few otheroperas balance so much so well from startto finish. Grand spectacle and intimatepersonal drama are fused into an over¬whelming whole by a great composerworking at the height of his powers. Thatthe composer was also an experienced andperceptive man of the theater guaranteesa dramatic experience to match the mag¬nificent music. No one production of such awork can hope to do justice to all its variedelements, but nonetheless, Lyric Opera ofChicago’s new production of Aida workswell on enough levels to make for a verysatisfying evening of musical theater.Aida, a story of love Inyaltv and d@ath set in the Egypt of the Pharoahs, was thebrainchild of the Khedive of Egypt, whowanted a suitable grand musical event tocelebrate the 1869 opening of the SuezCanal. Verdi refused this commission; hedidn’t need the money, and he was sick ofworking in the theater, which so often hadmeant battles with unsympathetic andegotistical singers, as well as insensitiveand unyielding censors. As far as he wasconcerned, he was retired, and leading thelife of a gentleman farmer. But he had toadmit that libretto offered him was good,and after hearing that an Egyptian com¬mission might be offered to Wagner, Verdirose to the challenge. If Cairo wantedgrand opera, they would have it, with avengence; Verdi was going to show themhow it was done.After long delays, the opera premieredin Cairo on December 24, 1871. Criticsfrom all over the world gathered, anxiousto find out if Verdi was still the master. Bythe evening’s end, they knew he was. Andsoon the entire world knew, as Aida wasperformed triumphantly in the city aftercity, becoming a permanent part of thestandard repertory.Nearly a hundred years passed; eventu-„ ally, the bottom fell out. Where were thesingers with the power and the style toperform Aida? James Levine, musicaldirector of the Metropolitan Opera, saidthat the opera was currently virtually un¬castable. A drought of dramatic voicescapable of singing operas like Aida hadstruck, a drought that continues today.Chicago hadn’t heard the opera in eight¬een years; could Lyric, in 1983, hope topresent a worthy Aida?We needn’t have worried — Lyric hasmanaged to field a creditable cast for itsAida, one that’s solid from top to bottom.Starting at the top, Anna Tomowa-Wintowis Aida. Her powerful, Slavic-tinged voicewas able to cut through the largest ense¬mbles, but she was not afraid to sing soft¬ly when the music demanded — indeed,her pianissimo was one of the most beauti¬ful sounds heard the entire evening. Hercharacterization was effective, though not nearly as sensitive as her singing. Gui-se’ppe Giacomini (replacing Luciano Pa¬varotti) was Radames, the passionateEgyptian general who plays the pivitalrole in the love triangle crucial to theopera’s action. His dark, almost baritonaltenor coped admirably, if sometimes a bitblusteringly, with both the lyrical andmartial demands of his role. He cut amanly and forthright figure on stage, andwas particularly good in the despairingclose of the third act. Fiorenza Cossetto, asthe final, problematic third of this trian¬gle, the princess Amneris, was a bit of astick dramatically, but how she sang! Herglamorous mezzo-soprano is still firm andpowerful after a long career. But perhapsthe most exciting performance came fromSwedish baritone Ingvar Wixell as Aida'sfather, the Ethiopian warrior-king Amon-asro. His bright, well-focused singing andenthusiastic acting made for an electrify¬ing third act Nile scene, by turns warnlypaternal and wildly ferocious. This was agreat performance from a major artist.Bruno Bartoletti, Lyric’s artistic direc¬tor, returned to the pit after recuperatingfrom a heart attack suffered early lastseason. It was good to have him back. Histempos were on the quick side, and a pro-pulsively dramatic performance was theresult, though the singers were givenplenty of room in the more expansive mo¬ments.The director, Nicolas Joel, wisely stuckfairly close to Verdi's stage directions; hiswork seemed never less than competent,but rarely truly illuminating, save for anexciting triumphal scene. The same maybe said of Pet Halmen, the designer. Hissets and costumes, while not terribly at¬tractive, nonetheless combined for someeffective stage pictures.Aida is back in town. There are twomore performances, tonight and Mondayat 7:30. Though officially sold out, sometickets may be available due to last min¬ute cancellations. It’s worth a try — itmight be a long time before we see an¬other one. And the fact that it’s a good onemakes it aoubiy worthwhile.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983-9ir' STRONG AND EXCITING SHOW AT SMARTby Jonathon KatzThe new show at the Smart Gallery, NewImage/Pattern and Decoration from theMorton G. Neumann Family Collection, ishot — the colors are hot, the images arehot, and, not least, the artists are hot. Fea¬turing such names as Salle, Schnabel,Borofsky, Chia, and Clemente, this show isa good introduction to the post-modernistwave that has swept New York in recentyears like nothing since Warhol and Pop.The very title, New Image/Pattern andDecoration, is a study in contrasts, reveal¬ing the curatorial disorder that infectspost-modernist painting at this time.These paintings are new — all paintedwithin the last five years, most in the lastyear or two — so there’s very little dis¬tance for peaceful reflection. While nogood, vital movement shows a stylisticunity, Imagism is particularly heterogen¬eous, as we will see in the consideration ofsome select works in the show.The exhibit ranges from the quiet,poised complexities of pattern painterMiriam Schapiro to the raw, crude expres¬sionism of Imagist Rainer Fetting. Two dis¬tinct movements are embraced in thisshow, lending a sense of disjunction as onemoves from, for example, the burninganger of Imagist Hollis Sigler to the pasto- „ral “Savannah Nights” by pattern painter ?Robert Zakanitch. Indeed, the only unify- -ing factors underlying the joint presents- gtion of two very distinct movements seemto be their common provenance in the col¬lection of Morton G. Newmann (Chicagocollector par excellence and l). of C. alum¬nus), and their uniform opposition to thecold formalism of Minimalism and ColorField painting which dominated the latesixties and early seventies. Sam Hunterwrites in the exhibit catalog, ‘‘The artistsof the seventies repudiated the exclusiveconcern with the physical properties ofart, with elements of surface, edge and sil¬houette, form, shape and color, at the ex¬pense of image, symbol, metaphor, narra¬tive, and emotional resonance.” Of course,image, symbol, metaphor, and narrativeare not new to painting; they’ve simplybeen out of style.Pattern and decoration painting, or P &D for short, came out of a new reverencefor the concept of decoration, given impe¬tus by the then prevailing style of spare,hard-edge abstraction. The works aregenerally complex, heavily worked, andlush. Inspired by traditional crafts oncethough womanly, these paintings by bothmen and women challenge traditional no¬tions of what is art, conflating traditionalconcepts of high art with the low art ofdecoration, and in so doing clear a pathfor the subsequent Imagist movement.Archetypal among the pattern paintingsis Miriam Schapiro’s well-known “Heart¬felt”. The dense, optical space of the workand its complex, richly worked surface areall hallmarks of Pattern painting. No¬teworthy among the pieces on display isone of Lucas Samaras’ pioneering stitchedfabric works and Robert Kushner’s “Birdof Paradise” banner. Still P & D paintingis, well, decorative. While this is a finerepresentative collection, it serves to un¬derline the intellectual weakness of themovement. Technically accomplished andoften quite beautiful, much of the P & Dpainting on display is ultimately empty orperhaps better, mute. James Sullivan “Dance at Waterside”The New Image work is the heart of theexhibit, and the reason you should go seeit. Perhaps these violent, surreal, nervouspaintings are emblematic of our time.Painter Peter Dean sees his role as that of“a magician through whom the images ofour time pass and become paintings.” Themovement achieved official recognitionwith the Whitney Museum of AmericanArt’s 1978 exhibit “New Image Paint¬ing.” Curiously, that exhibit contained noworks by Chicago artists, and this one hasbut two-Sigler and Africano. The earlier,fecund Chicago Imagist school seems some¬what tangential to this newer, more inter¬national movement which flourishes in atriangle bounded by Italy, Germany, and,primarily, New York. The roots of thisNew Images are quite complex and deep,with German Expressionism, Surrealism,and De Kooning-like/figuration all playinga part. In many of these works, the angstis Expressionist, the paint-handling DeKooningesque, and the subject surreal.The American triumverate of DavidSalle, Julian Schnabel, and JonathanBorofsky is well represented. The Salle,with its sketchy painting of two womendancing together superimposed over alarger, more volumetric figuration, isquite evocative. The suggestions of pastand present, detail and scope, memoryand experience resonate even in the title,“The Far-Off Remembering of the Intu¬ition.” Salle paints somewhere in betweenthese worlds, in the dreamy gap betweenthe present and the past. The Schnabel“Raped by a Zombie” gets away from hisfamous broken pottery surfaces. IFs astrong piece with bleeding hearts, a zom¬bie-like form in the left panel, and a punc¬tured human figure in the right. Jonathan Borofsky’s “Molecule Man” stands as awarning, or perhaps a prediction in the nu¬clear age. Borofsky paints a pale silhouet¬ted figure, pierced by numerous irregularholes, thus the molcular man of the title. Itis haunting in its very understatement, re¬markably free of the self-conscious melo¬drama that characterizes, and mars, muchImagist work.The same cannot be said of NicholasAfricano, Richard Bosman, and the Ger¬man Fetting, who, while stylistically di¬verse, share a predilection for that mo¬ment beyond the scream. The Bosman andFetting are fairly typical, but I’ve seenmuch stronger work by Africano.Two paintings in the Chicago Imagistvein by Herve Di Rosa and Kenny Scharfare specially featured in this Chicago in¬stallation of the exhibit, though they arenot in the catalogue. Both works demon¬strate a strong technique and color sense,though ultimately their cereal-box surre¬alism (the Scharf reminded me of Quispads) has as little to say as its commercialcounterpart. Also specially lent for thisexhibit is a work by Jean-Michel Basquiat,one of a group of New York artists knownas graffitists. These young artists (Bas¬quiat was born in 1960) have little or noformal training and seem to drawstrength and energy from the adornedsubway cars and underpasses of NewYork. The uptown art world has foundthese works to be quite charming, espe¬cially when lifted from their urban contextand disarmed by being placed in the gal¬lery, where ultimately, only ideas are atrisk.In one of his two paintings in the show,Jean-Michel Basquiat seems almost to betrying to conjure a wall in the construction of his painting surface. He permits thewooden supports of the canvas to extendbeyond the fabric, further calling atten¬tion to them by the addition of paint andhinges. Perhaps Basquiat the graffitist isseeking to remove his work from its arthistorical context, violating the tradition¬al notions of canvas and shape (althoughsuch violations now seem to be the art his¬torical context). In any case, Basquiat’scurious construction, painted in a raw,arte brute gesture, strikes me as ratherprecious and ironic. This is not a graffitiedwall of some derelict building, but a paint¬ing, bought for no small sum of money andnow hanging in an art museum. Severedfrom its urban context, this work mustnow be read as painting, and as painting, Ifind it deficient. Perhaps this is why Bas¬quiat may be trying to recapture some ofhis original context. I don't think he can.Art galleries and catalogs have a way ofco-opting even the best non-art. Bas¬quiat’s non-art now hangs on the museumwall as a testament to the power of insti¬tutionalized art. To seek to pretend other¬wise is both cheap and ironic.Keith Haring’s large, busy, gestural can¬vases stand in many ways between P & Dand Imagism. At once figurative and pat¬terned, they evoke much so-called “primi¬tive art”, particularly Native American.These are ritualistic, symbolic paintings,drawn in heiroglyphs we cannot decipher,yet understand.Painted in much the same manner butmore strongly Imagist is the work of H.R.Penck. His superb “T II” hails back to theearly Adolph Gottlieb but presents aneven surer and stronger image, more ar¬chetypal and symbolic. The work is imme¬diately riveting. Whether in the consciousor the unconscious mind, in Freudian or inJungian terms (and I think it’s both),Penck’s image strikes a chord keep withinus. I felt I knew the painting, yet I’d neverseen it before. Penck betrays a sure handand firm resolve some of the other,younger Imagists lack. He has clearlytaken the time to think things through.The two stars of this show are Jedd Gar¬ret and James Sullivan, a comparativelyunknown, older (for this group) artist.Curiously, both works seem to have theleast in common with the bulk of the Ima¬gist painting presented. The Garret ismagnificent, painted in deep rhythmicstrokes that somehow manage to evokeboth Van Gogh and Hockney, hysteria andsensuous pleasure. The ambiguous space,a la Francis Bacon, adds to this sense ofconfusion. Alternately joyous and terri¬fying, this painting seduces and repels,and in so doing is perhaps the most em¬blematic of our time. There is no meldra-ma, no overstatement, no comic book vio¬lence. The threat out there is real, and yetwe are invited, no encouraged, to forgetit.The Sullivan is more narrative, andnearly equally beautifully painted. Enti¬tled “Dance at Waterside”, its Munch-likeair of melancholy, of dancing in the face ofdeath is made palpable through heavy im-pasto and relief. It must be seen.This is the strongest show I’ve seen atthe Smart in a while, and it’s an encourag¬ing sign. The Kalamazoo Institute of Arts,which organized the show, must be com¬mended for its excellent selection, as mustcollector Neumann.ogogogogogogo3So°oSo°o°o°o°5°ro 0o°o°o00o°o°o0oXoXoSo o°o°o°o?O® 0°'"'°r'0 ll|l|i°o°o°o SgSgSgSg; uou6°ou°o°o°o°°o°o°o°0?0“0„0 ggopppps oXo„oroYoYo«oogogogogogogoo°oXo°oSo°oXo oSo£og5gSgogog5go2o2o°o°o°o°oXocXoXoXoXoXoXo; oooXo °00000°00°o0o0o°o0oXo°o2o°o3°o°o°o®o°o°o0o®o°o0o°o0o°o°o0o°o°o°o°o0o°6°o®o°o°o°o0o°o°o°o®o®o°o°o®o°o°o°o°o°o°o°o°o°o°o0o0o0o°o°o°o°o°o®o°o°o°o°o°o°o°o®^§o^§2S®§2§o°ogogogogo°ogoOo°oOo°o®ogo§oOoOo°o°o°oOo®o®ogo°o®ogogo°ogoOo°o®o|o§ogo§ogoOogo§o§o§ogogogo§ogogogogogogogo|ogoCRAZY UFE.H0PI MORALby Dennis MiserKOYAANISQATSI, a Hopi word, mean¬ing: life out of balance, a way of livingthat demands another way of living, crazylife, etc. A word, some meanings, a film.The film has no words; it consists entirelyof footage synchronized to a score by Phi¬lip Glass. But the message of this film hasless to do with the title and its definitions,and even less to do with the blatantly pro¬pagandists devices employed at variouspoints by the director, than with the sen¬sual effects produced by the cinematogra¬phic methods used to compress time for us,allowing us to see natural and human phe¬nomena in patterns not normally appre¬hensible.The film opens with an extended slow-motion shot of the liftoff of a rocket, withwhat looks like snow gently falling (in ac¬tuality ice formed on the liquid oxygenfuel tanks being shaken loose as the rock¬et ascends.) We see the flame of the jets atthe bottom of the screen as more and moreice is thrown from the sides of the ascend¬ ing machine: fire and ice, painful violentbirth, mechanical man spectacularlywresting from the earth what he will. “Koya a nis qat si,” intones a baritone choirall the while.Next movement: nature, the earth, anexploration using the tools of slow-motionand time-compressing cinematography.We see painted deserts, we see theocean’s power in the slow descent of abreaking wave, we see the liquid patternsof clouds: clouds marching across the sky,forming and re-forming, mists spillingover hills and ridges; we see the wind¬blown sands ripple along the dunes. Wesee patterns form out of massive numbersof particles that coalesce into the waveforms of cloud, mist, dune.Now for the world of human civilization,as you have never before seen it: trafficon city streets, traffic on freeways, lightscoming on and going out in skyscrapers inNY, LA, Chicago; pedestrians as particlesand as waves, bunching and dispersing, atthe K-Mart, racetrack, bowling alley, res¬taurant; and men working at assembly lines, women transferring twinkies fromone assembly line to another; stream ofpeople moving on banks of escalators,crosscut with shot of machine which pro¬pels rows of sausages downscreen, cutback to human escalator traffic movingupscreen. Then the whole round again, butfaster this time, faster traffic as automo¬biles take turns crossing intersections, fas¬ter human traffic coursing through trainstations and standing on line and eating,faster freeway traffic. And again, andfaster again, and again. By this time youbegin to feel actual vertigo, the repetitionof images, the exact same sequences hook¬ing you in so you can’t get off the acce¬lerating carnival ride that started outnovel and pleasantly exciting, and nowbegins to veer toward the terrifying: youfind yourself in a car speeding down thefreeway at 200 mph; you see individualsin a crowd moving by so quickly they ceaseto exist as particulate individuals, andexist now only as components of thecrowd, the wave that is the crowd, thecrowd that is a surging wave.Throughout this sequence of human pat¬terns have been interspersed slow-motionshots of pedestrians on a city street; facedwith a movie camera pointing at them,they react (effectively, to us, the eye ofthe camera) with a variety of hostility andsubmission gestures. The last of theseshots, the longest and most harrowing,shows us a fiftyish bluecollar male, tired, walking toward us, becoming irritated,then angry, then pissed off at our insistentcuriosity as we turn to follow his motionpast the camera (where he glares at usfrom 12 inches away) and down the street(as he turns and continues to glare over hisshoulder as he recedes.) Excepting theescalator-sausage crosscutting, this is thecheapest, most blatant shot of the film,which points most directly to the intent ofthe film’s author. To show the ugliness ofcivilized existence, life that has alienateditself from nature, whose patterns are in¬tricate and even beautiful, but pushed andextended, sped-up again and again, crossover the threshold into meaninglessness.The film works despite this heavy-hand¬ed bias. There are, no shots in slow motionshowing the ‘inherent’ gracefulness of thefactory workers’ movements, no footageof the effects of the chaotic violence of na¬ture. The film sets up an opposition be¬tween raw nature (in the form of land¬scape, and a scant few plants; animals aretoo complex, too potentially mediatingperhaps) and the artifacts of civilization.The deck is stacked by a careful manipula¬tion of subject mater and the manner,speed and pace of presentation. But thefilm does succeed in showing things ’in anew light.’ And the soundtrack is weddedto the visuals, matching the repetitionsand modulations of the film so as tocreate an experience esthetically formid¬able, if ideologically disappointing.10— FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNAL*Attention to All of OurHyde Park Friends & Customers...We are happy to report that weare now in our 93rd YEAR atWRIGHT LAUNDRYAND CLEANERSand we are continuing to offeryou the same fine qualityFULL SERVICELAUNDRY& DRY CLEANINGOPEN MON-SAT 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.1315 E. 57th & Delivery Service 643-2073 DUKETHE FUQUASCHOOLOF BUSINESSMBAThe Fuqua School of Business at DukeUniversity offers one of the finest availableopportunities for unsurpassed professionalmanagement training. We are interested inmen and women who have proven aca¬demic, leadership, and social abilities.Noel Coward'sHAY FEVER“Endearingly outrageous". Chicago TribuneMGMdy...StyNsh...d«Hgt!tfuHy daffy”...C/)/cago Sun-TimesMany performances already sold-out!Extended to October 30 to meetticket demand ISept. 29 - Oct. 30Wednesday - Saturday,8pmSunday, 2:30 & 7:30pm753-4472Visa/MC/Amex Court TheatreThe University ofChicago5535 S. Ellis AvenueSticks & StuffCOLLECTIBLES • ANTIQUES • USED FURNITURE •CLOCKS • LAMPS • DOLLS • JEWELRY • STAINED GLASSMINIATURE LAMPS • STAINED GLASS BUSINESS CARD HOLDERSHours:1749 E. 55th St. Tues-Fri Noon - 7 pm 667-4610Sat & Sun 10 am - 5 pm ? ■' Professor Marian Burkeof the Fuqua Schoolwill be on campusThursday, October 20Appointment information may be obtainedby contacting:Office of Career Counselingand PlacementYOUR 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 • I.B.X. 5-4364All Brands Importers Inc.. New York Sole U S Importer CTHATROAREDImported Moosehead. Stands head and antlers above the restBRAKE FOR MOOSEHEAD. WHEN YOU DRINK DON'T DRIVE.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983-11THE DESERTED TRAINOur train, alongside, halted.The still lit other coach, deserted.Why had they stopped between Valparaisoand the next town, and in evening?And why did our own train rest now?We passengers had no answer;the conductors ceased their rounds long pastTerror unfolded her asters in my gut.They had deserted quickly:half full glasses of beer,a brown coat in the aisle,and of course those sickly hidden lightsIt’s night—thenthat our human brain arcs back.The other coach’s lights go darkour windows turned mirrors:My face all cheekbone, hollows, pits.Blisters of rain streaked glass,I found myself talking intimately to them allof a lover who’d shunned me, and theytold me dreams of wealth,dreams of cutting down cigarettesThen silence. No resortbut to leave our own train,and out there, beside our own dark train,even speckles of light from the next towndid not comfort us,even the hands we grasped did not.—John Schulman, GREY CITY BRUNCHI SUNDAY NOON TALK EAT GET EVEN SMARTER*■ 5617 S. DREXEL 2 TALK EAT GET EVEN SMARTERCOULD BE THE BEST THING THATEVER HAPPEN HAPPENED TO YOU12—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALr■911111. 1IIII11111mmmgrn.WSMwim& / % * n'■ -xi# s ^.A j 7F ■, .j,„,wmm■■V,/* I:%%x;“•"(•NirtfiiThere’s a lot of Strohbehind a Stroh Signature^*This exceptional premium beer Is a product of over m l200 years of Stroh family brewing experience.Our family began brewing in Kirn, Germany in 1775. m ;brewer s art.We believe that Stroh Signature is as fine a beer as canincluding 100% imported European hopsI personally hope you enjoy it.ChairmanThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983—11FEATURESWHPK, 88.3 on your FM dialBy Jill SwensonA haven for ears and hearts,WHPK’s unusual and progressiveformat broadcasts 24 hours a dayevery day of the year with a heavyemphasis on music air play.A Hyde Park-Kenwood communityinstitution in its own right, theUniversity of Chicago radio stationremains a 10-watt operation pendingFCC hearing decisions on its changein frequency with the plannedtransformation to 100 watts. Becauseof its long history in the community,the local listening audience issurprisingly larger than the campusone. A truly professional alternativestation. WHPK gives much air time torock, jazz, reggae and rhythm andblues. Programming also includesclassical, wave, punk, folk, funk,blues, public affairs, specialprograms, and live coverage of U of Cfootball games.The continuity of programmingsince the 60s has established a broadbased connection between theUniversity and the South Side. As one of the University’s most effectivevehicles for positive communityrelations, the administration,particularly the dean of student’soffice, has supported thetransformation to 100-watt capacity,thereby broadening its base ofexposure. Several of the best ofWHPK’s jocks are non-studentmembers. Many Hyde Park residentsconsider WHPK their radio station.Who is WHPK’s listening audience?A collage of ears composed of peoplelike Jeffery Express riders onMonday tuning into rock on portableheadsets. Physical plant employeesdriving their white pick-ups downStony Island with the dial set on 88.3.Dedication requests have beenreceived in the middle of the nightfrom joggers along Lake Michiganwho phone in from highway booths.Calls are being taken daily fromneighborhood kids at home checkingout “educational radio” while theyenjoy the teachers’ strike.Osteopathic, Hyde Park Community,and Billings hospitals all have theirregular listeners, especially of theweekend R&B programs. BillFindley’s reggae show attracts manyfrom the Jamaican community justblocks south of the midway. Banktellers, lab technicians and studentsin dorms have all experienced thewide variety of programs offered byWHPK.The general style of delivery bymost of WHPK’s jocks isnon-intrusive. The urgency of‘commercial’ radio is gone, leavingjust the peace between the ears andthe sounds. The professionalism of thestaff, says Tom Uhl, station manager,is such that were WBEZ not inexistence, WHPK would most likelybe Chicago’s National Public Radiostation. Consistency in excellencecharacterize the R&B, reggae, jazzand rock shows. Avid listeners frequently get hooked on particularshows and their radio personalities.“From Bauhaus to Your House”airs every Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.The host is Leah Mayes, whoredefines rock with a contemporarymix of vulgarity, spirituality andsounds. The show glides frommainstream ‘rock and roll’ to theforeign rock scene. Dipping intoreggae, your feet begin tingling andtapping. You can dance in your chair,relax, rap, and recover, rediscovermusic in your soul that gets lost in therut routine of the week. Mayes dips inand out of eras and classes, temposand trances without missing a singlebeat. The show is enervating, eclecticand easy. Leah’s voice is controlled,soft, and decivingly ‘studied.’ Shespeaks easily, without the urgency of‘hip.’ What is spinned on the tables is not mainstream by any means, butthe audience looking for analternative will be pleased to discoverits ‘rock appeal’.Reggie Sanson hosts a Sunday showfrom noon to 3 p.m. which transcendscategorical classifications. The showleaves you lifted, lighthearted, and inlove again. He’ll spin James Taylor’sversion back to back with a JohnnyMathis’ rendition of “Don’t Let me BeLonely Tonight,” or contrast NancyWilson singing Broadway hits withVan Morrison’s “Moon Dance,”echoed later in the program by BobbyMcFarrin with yet another “MoonDance.”The show is timeless in itsmusicality, blending Anita Baker’slatest and greatest “Angel” withcascades of golden oldies.PHOTOS BY ZLATKO BATtSTICHNOTICE 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., Saturdays *Closed Sundays12—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983SUNDAYFRIDAYSAO: Ticket Order Deadline for The1940's Radio Hour performance 10/15.Ida Noyes, rm 210.Hillel Forum: Jews in Islamic Lands:The Golden Age, Myth, The Black Le¬gend, Historical Realism. Prof. WalterP. Zenner, Anthropology Dept. SUNY.8:30pm Hillel. Free.I-House Film Society: King of Hearts,7:30 & 9:30pm. I-House, $2 includes pop¬corn.DOC: Octopussy, 7, 9, 11 pm. Cobb. $2.Development Colloquium Series: Dr.Richard A. Shweder, Culture and MoralDevelopment, 3 pm Psy B102.Square Dance Club: 7pm Ida NoyesHall.Geophysical Sciences Dept: Minerology-Petrology Seminar, Alfred T. Anderson,Jr. Hat Creek Basalt, 3 pm, Hinds 101.Philosophy Dept. The Stratigic Struc¬ture of Moral Problems, Russell Hardin,4pm, Harper Memorial Library 103. Cof¬fee Hour 3-4pm Classics 16.Career Counseling & Placement: Ven¬ture Program. 12 noon Reynolds Club201.CROSSROADS: Beginning English10am, Intermediate English 10:45, Begin¬ning Spanish 7pm.SATURDAYSAO: Ida Noyes Flea Market. 10-4, IdaNoyes Parking Lot.SAO: Theatre Discount. The 1940 ’sRadio Hour, 8 pm.DOC/LSF: Gandhi 6:45 & 10 pm MandelHall $2.CROSSROADS: Buffet Dinner. SpecialNorwegian dessert!WORLD POETRY DAY: Poetry Pot-luck; 6pm, 1st Unitarian Church 5650 S.Woodlawn Garden Room. Bring food,poems. CROSS COUNTRY: UCTC Open fourmile run, 11am Washington Park.Woodward Court Lecture: David Be-vington, Prof. Dept, of English Lan¬guage and Literature in the College.Ellen Harris, Asst. prof. Dept, of Music& the College. Othello & Otello; Shake¬speare & Verdi. 8:30 Woodward CourtCafeteria, Reception follows.Oriental Institute Films: Egypt: Gift ofthe Nile, 2pm Museum Auditorium.Free.DOC/LSF: Gandhi, 2:30 pm, Cobb $2.DOC: Coup de Torchon, 8pm Cobb $2.FOLKDANCING: Teaching 8-9:30, Re¬quest 9:30-11:30. Ida Noyes Hall.CROSSROADS: Horseback Riding.Meet at 8:30.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: 8:30 Chan¬cel Choir Rehearsal, 9:00 EcumenicalService of Holy Communion, 10:00 Reli¬gious Instruction for Children, 11:00University Religious Service, 12:15Carillon Recital and Tower Tour.MONDAYSAO: CALENDAR ITEM DEADLINE.Ida Noyes 210.Career & Placement Services; Recruiting& Your Job Search.DOC: Home from the Hill 8pm Cobb,$1.50.FOLKDANCING: teaching 8; 9:30, Re¬quest 9:30-11:30. Ida Noyes 7pm.Chemistry Dept.: Study of Organic Re¬action Intermediated Using Laser Tech¬niques, Dr. JC Scaiano, National Re¬search Council Ottowa, Ontario,Canada. HGS 101, 4pm.Chess Club: 7pm Instruction, 7:30games. Ida Noyes.HUMAN NEEDS & WORLD SECURI¬TY: Lecture & Discussion, 7:30 pm 7354S. Merrill.Latin Americal Studies Center & Inter¬national House: Prospects for Peace inEl Salvador, Guillermo Manual Ungo,President of the Revolutionary Demo¬cratic Front of El Salvador. Internation¬al House Assembly Hall, 3pm. Free.r— MORRY’S BAKERYIN THE “C” SHOPFRIDAY SPECIALFRESH BREAD SALEINTRODUCTORY OFFER:1 lb. Twist Raisin Chollie 1.191 lb. Twist Plain Chollie 1.192 lb. Twist Raisin Chollie 2.092 lb. Twist Plain Chollie 2.091 lb. Onion Pumpernickel 1.191 lb. Raisin Pumpernickel 1.19% lb. Raisin Pumpernickel Round .89■ Strictly Kosher Products!MORRY'S BAKERY■ in the "C" ShopL 1131 E-—H flHThe Chicago Maroon—1 "riday, October 14. 1983—13Rochester pounds Maroons in 3-0 shutoutBy Anthony Cashman“This is the worst that they’veplayed all season,” remarked one fanas he watched the University of Ro¬chester pound out a 3-0 victory over theU of C soccer team on Tuesday. Theloss drops the Maroons’ record to4-2-1.Before the game one of the Chicagoplayers said that the coach was wor¬ried about the team. Coming off of a 2-1victory over Ripon in which they couldhave scored no less than five times,and a “bad” practice the day beforethe game, any optimism on the benchwas guarded. Coach Barry DeSilva be¬lieves that practice is indicative ofwhat a team will do in a game.DeSilva’s beliefs and fears were con¬firmed after the first five minutes. TheMaroons could not respond to the re¬lentless Rochester pressure and the de¬fense failed about twenty minutes intothe first half. An unmarked Rochesterplayer walked in on goalkeeper JoeMario and placed the ball inside thenear post, to give the visitors a 1-0lead.The goal, however, did not spark theMaroons. It seemed to result in an evengreater lethargy on the U of C side. De¬fensive standout Bo Flores said whenhe came off the field after a substitu¬tion, “We’re playing bad. Everybody’s asleep out there.”Rochester scored the second goal ona high cross in the second half when anunmarked man knocked a head ballhome. Their third goal followed aboutone minute later when a Rochesterplayer approached keeper Mario andput the ball in the left corner.The entire game was characterizedby a lack of ball control and a genuinefailure on the Maroons’ part to mountany serious offense. Mario comment¬ed, “We looked really flat... we neversustained an attack, i don’t remembera good scoring opportunity.”Coach DeSilva felt that one of themajor problems centered on the failureof the midfield to respond to the pres¬sure that the Rochester midfield ap¬plied with their identical 4-4-2 align¬ment. “They put pressure on us in themidfield. Instead of playing the ball up,they were turning. You can’t turn onthe ball with two players aroundyou.”Another problem was noted by for¬ward Jason Pressman. “We didn’t goto the ball,” he said. “We stood andwatched them toy with us.” At onepoint DeSilva declared “they’re stand¬ing next to their man. They’re not mov¬ing into empty spaces.” ForwardDavid Ansani stated the problem best:“The team wasn’t moving as a whole.X-country third at BeloitBv Bob FisherThe men’s*cross country team hadanother successful road trip last week¬end. finishing third in the 15-team Be¬loit Invitational. St. Xavier Collegewon the meet with 51 points, while theMaroons scored 101.Aaron Rourke again led the team,/ NDR. M. R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100■ 11%*-**i|^S*T*nMr Cfclomrtnc AaoaatorV 'm J finishing 13th in a time of 27:34. BobFisher and Mike Rabieh followed clo¬sely at 15th and 19th in times of 27:40and 28:01. Tne next three runners. PaulUlrich, David Raskin and Adam Vo-draska, finished close together at 26th,28th and 32nd in times of 28:20, 28:27and 28:38 respectively. Freshmancontinued on page 16Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru FridaySat. 1CM=w=1 YOU'RE WELCOMEto come and be a part of thewarm fellowship, serious study andjoyful worship ofCORNELL BAPTIST CHURCH5001 S. EllisSusan Lockwood WrightPastor363-4496 • 268-4910 Student Pick-upin front of Regenstein9:40 a.m. for Discussion Classes10:40 a.m. for Worship*— ^ >< —14—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983 There was offense, midfield, and de¬fense. We were too disjointed. Wenever had anything going.”Finally, the Maroons were beat phy¬sically on the field. DeSilva stated thatthe Rochester squad was “in a lot bet¬ter physical condition than we were.”One bright spot was the play ofMario. Despite the one-sided score,Mario handled more than 10 difficultchanges in the air and made a spectac¬ular sliding save on a breakaway. Oneplayer stated that Mario was “the one keeping us from being blown away.”The U of C soccer team will come offa four-day break this weekend for agame on Saturday at Illinois Instituteof Technology and a Sunday match-upagainst Notre Dame in South Bend.More importantly, the Maroons have acrucial conference game against LakeForest at home on Tuesday. Theplayers and coach are all optimisticthat the break will get the team “backinto game shape.”Home RunnersBy Bob FisherLast Saturday about 40 runners par¬ticipated in the second annual HomeRun, a 2.5 mile race through thecampus. The Chicago Police gracious¬ly escorted the group around StaggField, down to the Midway, through theQuads, and around Regenstein Li¬brary. The overall winner was Phillip Brett, who finished in a time of 13:55.Partly because of the removal of itsprevious status as an IM event, therace lost the participation of under¬graduate houses. A notable exception,Thompson House, accounted for overone fourth of the participants.Here are the divisional winners:DivisionUndergraduate WomenUndergraduate MenOpen WomenOpen Men Winner TimeLinda Kinney 17:06Steve Eick 14:17Cheryl Kennedy 26:31Phillip Brett 13:55Put the pastin yourfuture!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.— All new kitchens and appliances — Community room-Wall-to-wall carpeting ' — Resident manager— Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional indoor or outdcxir — Laundry facilities onparking each fkxirStudios, One, Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One Bedroom from $505 — Two Bedroom from $700Rent includes heat, ax>king gas, and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment — 643 1406Ouse1642 East 56th Streerin Hyde Park, across the park fromThe Museum of Science and Industryfcquai \lousing ()pp<>rtumty Managed by Mure >plex, IncIntroducingMORRY MONEYPresent this coupon and receive $1.00 purchasing power.Your cost: 50cGood only at Morry’sEL LUGAR684-6514 1603 E* 55th St* MONDAY - SATURDAYThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983—15Co-ed crewBy Gregg CrabbeThe University of Chicago Co-edCrew Club opened its 1983 fall seasonwith an impressive showing at theHead of the Mississippi Regatta lastSaturday in Minneapolis, winning theMen’s Open 4, and taking second inboth the Women’s Open 4 and theMixed 8. Both fours consisted of theclub’s lightweight boatings, rowing inwhat was seen as a warm-up for theHead of the Charles Regatta in BostonOct. 23.The men’s four (Carla Pritchett,cox; Jon Pritchett, stroke; Mark Sex¬ton, 3; Greg Prince, 2; Ted Buetel,bow) defeated rival and host Minnea¬polis Rowing Club by 11 seconds, fin¬ishing in a time of 15:03. In thewomen’s four. Chicago (Ian Sweedler,cox; Sarah Potter, stroke; AnnaVolleyball sweeps TrinityPHOTO BY ZLATKO BATISTICH opens seasonBy Spencer ColdenThis past Tuesday night, the Univer¬sity of Chicago women’s volleyballteam hosted Trinity College, for thesecond time this season. As before, theMaroons won the match in consecutivegames with a score of 3-0.The first game went extremelyquickly, as the Maroons did not let up asingle point to complete their first shut¬out of the season, 15-0. The game wasvery fast-paced and had some hard hit¬ting. Hitters Randi Wagner and cap¬tain Celeste Travis made some smash¬ing shots.The second game was also fast-paced but Trinity, managed to score afew points as the Maroons made a fewerrors and Trinity made some goodshots. But eight points was not enoughto win the game, giving the game to U of C by a score of 15-8. There weresome great saves by the Maroons inthis game, mainly by Travis, who inone instance made a dive almost intothe seats to save a ball, and hence apoint. Many of the points were won bythe awesome serves of sophomoreStephanie Grossman. The last gamewas closer until the end. but theMaroons managed to keep the lead,winning the game 15-12, and thematch.Trinity is clearly a weaker team inChicago’s division but it was a gamewhere the non-starters got a chance toplay. Coach Rosie Resch said that thematch was a “good opportunity to playour non-starters to give them first¬hand game experience, although westill played seriously.' The next matchis at Lawrence tonight. Leider, 3; Ingrid Hunt, 2; AdenaSchutzberg, bow) was edged out by 4seconds bv Mendota (Wis.) Boat Club,finishing in 17:23 over the 45000-metercourse.The hardier members, of both fourslater participated in the mixed eight,Tennis downedBy Jane LookThe University of Chicago women’stennis team hosted DePaul University,a tough Division I school, Tuesday. Thesquad boldly displayed its tenaciouscharacter, yet came up short in its ef¬fort and lost 5-4.Coach Christel Nicholls commented,“I was very optimistic abou the matchand felt the team would hold its ownagainst DePaul. Jane Look lost a veryclose match at first singles (7-5, 7-5) asdid Krista Choi and Grace Park atthird doubles (6-4, 6-3). We played verytight but just couldn't quite pull itoff.”Garnering victories for Chicagowere Beth Fama at second singles (6-3,6-1) and Caren Gauvreau at third sin¬gles (6-3, 4-6, 6-2). Look and Famawere victorious at first doubles (6-3,3-6, 9-7) and Gauvreau and CarrieVeach posted a 6-2. 6-2 victory at sec¬ond doubles.The team’s last match of the regularseason was played Wednesday againstnational Division III power Wheaton(results unavailable as of press time).Thus, the matches against the twotough schools served as a final tune-upfor the Midwest Conference TennisChampionships this weekend at Cor¬nell College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. losing only to the Minnesota Boat Clubentry.In rowing, the fall season is populat¬ed mainly by head races — all spiritualdescendants of the races among thecolleges at Oxford, in which the indi¬vidual colleges would compete for theposition of Head of the River. Headraces differ from the usual 2000 meterboat race in that the distance is longer(5000 meters) and, rather than startingall boats at once, each boat is started atapproximately 15-second intervals.The winning boat is the one with thefastest time.Included in the Club’s autumn sched¬ule are the Charles in Boston and, oneweek later, the Head of the Tennessee,in which the men’s lightweight four isthe defending champion. The Charlesis the largest regatta of its kind in thenation, with forty boats entered in eachof 18 events.Lacrosse losesBy Tim GoodellNorthwestern defeated U of C La¬crosse Club 5-1 in Evanston last Satur¬day in both teams’ fall opener.Northwestern managed only twogoals against a stingy Chicago defenseby half-time, but that was enough togive them a 2-0 lead. Late in the thirdquarter, Billy Meeks scored Chicago’sonly goal on a fast break to put Chicagoon the board. Three Northwesterngoals in the fourth quarter locked upthe victory for the Wildcats — a teamconsidered to be one of the finest in theMidwest.Despite the loss, Head Coach ScottJordan was pleased with Chicago’s per¬formance, saying, “We actually playedquite well considering that we had aweek to prepare and considering, aswell, that we had to do it without (Chi¬cago’s all-time scoring leader) BradGlaser.” Glaser left the Lacrosse Clubto play for Chicago-Miller.The most impressive performance inSaturday’s game came from severalfreshmen: Defenseman Bill Hutmanhad a fine game, as did midfielders JonHerskovitz and Hugh Birch. Goalie RobKenner (another freshman) played theentire game in the goal and collected 15saves.The Lacrosse Club’s toughest gametakes place this Saturday on the Mid¬way as it hosts the U of C Invitational;at noon, Chicago plays defending Mid¬west Champion Chicago-Miller. Chica¬go’s second game will be against Lin¬coln Park at 3:45.X-countrycontinued from page 14Kevin Nelson completed the top sevenfor Chicago, placing 42nd at 29:15.In the open division race, Chicago’snext four runners (Marc Giffen, SeanLove, Adrian Cho and Paul Manfredi)impressively took the first throughfourth places.American cross country is generallyrun on a smooth, well-trimmed field,such as a golf course. The Beloit racefollowed the more rugged Englishstyle: the runners had to jump logs,cross streams, climb hills, and evenpass through the rolling terrain of acemetery. A notable victim of thischallenging course was Paul Manfredi,who lost a shoe in the first creek-cross¬ing and ran the last three miles bare¬foot.Coach Ted Haydon was pleased withthe team’s performance and remarkedthat “the tight finish of the top five run¬ners, the overall improvement overlast year’s finish, and the performancein the open race are signs of a strongteam.”The Maroons travel to the suburbstomorrow for the eight-team JudsonCollege invitational.vrriri uiif vwnjri■WI ll l'1 yiuMHJfHILwiIn fact, we'll even pay you more than $575 a month while you attend. That’sin addition to paying for your full tuition and required books and fees.It’s all part of the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program.How does it work?If you’re selected for a Physician Scholarship-from the Army, Navy, orAir Force-you’re commissioned as an officer in the Reserve.While you’re in school, you’ll sen/e 45 days a year on active duty, gainingvaluable medical experience. After graduation, you will serve three or moreyears, the length depending on the requirements of the Service selected andyears of scholarship assistance received.As an Armed Forces physician you’ll receive officer’s pay and benefits,and enjoy the advantages of working regular hours. You’ll also see a diversityof patients and have opportunities to use sophisticated medical technology.But most important, while you’re in medical school we’ll help pay the bills.For more information, send in the coupon. There’s no obligation whatsoever.YeS, I am interested in receiving more information about an Armed ForcesProfessions Scholarship. I understand there is no obligation.Mail this coupon to:Armed Forces Scholarships, PO. Box C1776, Huntington Station, NY 11746Check up to three: □ ARMY □ NAVY □ AIR FORCEPlease Print All Information Clearly and Completely: es Health^^jj9003Name. .□ Male □ FemaleAddressCity Apt2.1 mi11Phone 1 1 I 1 1 1 Ml II 1 1 Soc Sec No 1 1 MIT ii 11 MArea Code NumberCollegeDate of Graduation I 1 I I I I Field of Study .Month Yearl^^te^nforrnation you voluntarily provide vrrtl be used for recruitmgpurpoees only The more complete it a,16—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983Tennis holds the top spot this week, as the Univer¬sity of Chicago women’s tennis team travels to Cor¬nell College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, today for theMidwest Conference Championships. Coach ChristelNicholls said, “These championships will be a newand hopefully successful experience for the team.Some team members had very successful seasonswhich will enable some of the players to be seeded intheir r^pective positions. I look forward to this ex¬citing climax of our already successful season.”The team will field a strong but consistent lineupat the Championships. Captain Jane Look, with aseasonal record of six wins and two losses, will leadthe team at the first singles spot. Nicholls said, “Ifeel Jane will be as impressive in Iowa as she hasbeen all season long. She has a very strong game, isin great shape, and has an iron will. She is reallyeager to do very well.If her impressive record of seven wins and one lossat number two singles is any indication, Beth Famashould fare very well. Fama is a strong and incred¬ibly consistent player. Her game features smoothstrokes and a feisty determination that never letsup.Caren Gauvreau, 6-2 at the third singles spot, willalso fare well in Iowa. Nicholls said, “Caren will con¬tinue to gut it out and go the distance. She outlastsher opponents with her tenacity and will be a force inthe number three draw.”Playing the fourth spot will be Carrie Veach, also6-2 on the season. Nicholls feels that Veach is im¬proving with each match, and will hold her own atthe fourth spot. Nicholls said, “If Carrie really wantsit and goes for it, there’s no stopping her.”Grace Park will play at the fifth position. Nichollscommented, “She is a yet untapped talent who cango as far as she wants to.” If Park keeps a levelhead, she may surprise a few people.Finally, the sixth position will be played by KristaChoi, a first-year squad member. Choi shows greatpromise and will make some good contributions tothe Maroon squad.A key factor to the Maroons’ team success in Iowawill be the play of the doubles teams. Look and Famawill play at the first position and have enjoyed a suc¬cessful 7-1 season. Both players were strong singlesplayers but if they play as a team, they will defin¬itely be contenders in the first doubles draw.Gauvreau and Veach, also 7-1 for the season,should be a surprise at the second spot. Nicholls said,“their doubles play is improving with each match,and if they are on, they will be a formidable team atthe second spot.”Playing the third spot are Park and Choi, who haverecently begun playing together. Nicholls said,“They are becoming more of a team as they prac¬tice. There’s no telling how they will do.”Thus the squad travels to Iowa with the hope ofmaking a fine showing in its first championship. Ni¬cholls said, “The team has done remarkably well de¬spite little fan support. No matter what happens inIowa, nothing can tarnish their very successful sea¬son. The team’s record of six wins and two losses isimpressive, but it is even more impressive when onerealizes that our losses were to Division I and IIschools.”Good luck to the team as it travels to Iowa.* * *This weekend the football team goes north of theborder to do battle with Beloit, a team very similarto the Maroons. Like the Maroons, the Beloit squadowns a 1-4 record, with their only win being a 28-0rout of lowly Grinnell. Obviously, this is a gamewhich Chicago can reasonably expect to win, if theyplay up to their potential. PHOTO BY ZLATKO BATISTICHrThe Third StringAnd coach Mick Ewing also seemed to assess theteam’s chance of winning this game in a favorablelight. “They are definitely not in the class of LakeForest,” Ewing said in estimating the abilities of theBeloit team, and added that “they are more at ourcurrent level of competition,” Beloit sports a fairlybalanced offensive attack, although they tend tofavor the running game.It seems almost certain, if Beloit has seen recentgame films, that they will try to run on the Maroondefense, which has had its troubles this year stop¬ping its opponent’s ground attack. In the past twogames they have allowed nearly 600 yards of rushingoffense, so this should be a very key matchup (U of Crun defense versus. Beloit running backs) in Satur¬day’s contest. The passing defense has been fairlyeffective so far this season, although Ewing has citedmissed assignments and improper alignments as acontributing factor in critical breakdowns in thepass defense.Effective passing would appear to be the key to thegame on the other side of the line of scrimmage. TheMaroon offense will definitely have a chance to showits wares this weekend against a defense which hasproved penetrable. If the U of C aerial attack kicksinto gear, the school record of 240 yards of passingcould easily be broken. But again, passing efficiencywill be a critical portion of the Beloit match.Last weekend’s game marked the halfway point inthe Maroons’ season, and while they have a disap¬pointing 1-4 record, there have been definite signs ofimprovement over the 1982 season (which saw Chi¬cago go down for nine straight losses). Any programthat goes through a season without a win can defin¬itely consider the following year a rebuilting time.And there it seems as though the U of C programmay just be turning around.Just look at the final scores of the games this year.With the possible exception of last week’s game, theMaroons have gone into the fouth quarter of everygame with a chance to win. The near misses againstKnox (10-8) and Washington University (10-0) areprime examples of the wholesale improvement. Lastyear the typical Maroon game was over before thefourth quarter even began, but this year they have been in the position where one score could haveturned the tide. Who knows what would have hap¬pened against Illinois College (a come-from-behindvictory by IC, 27-14) had the Maroons entered thegame with a rally for a victory under their belt? Justthe knowledge that they could come from behind towin (had they defeated Knox and Wash. U.) couldhave been an advantage in a situation like the ICgame. As unlikely as it sounds, the Maroons couldhave been, with a few breaks more than they havegotten this year, 4-1 instead of 1-4.Probably the largest part of this reconstructionprocess won’t be manifest until next year, when wewill see how many of the 25 or so freshmen from 1983will return to play football. If a large percentage ofthis year’s freshman contingent participates nextyear, the team will definitely be further on the roadto better things. That’s what makes teams like LakeForest, Ripon, and Lawrence perennial conferencepowers — each year they field a lot of returning let-termen, giving them a considerably more experi¬enced team than Chicago, Grinnell, and Beloit have.In order to reach parity the Maroons are going toneed a few athletes who stick around a few years.And the Maroons can take a large step forward to¬morrow with a victory in Wisconsin. Ewing notedthat “a win here would definitely be a confidencegain.” This would certainly be a good time for a con¬fidence builder, since after Beloit, the Maroons takeon the major conference powers, Ripon andLawrence, in games in which momentum could be ofsome importance.* * *The U of C soccer team will face its greatest testduring the next eight days. The team has five toughgames schedules during this period, includingmatches against Notre Dame and conference powerLake Forest.The Maroons have compiled a 4-2-1 record thus farand are still unbeaten in three conference games.The teams played well through the firxt six games,as the only loss came against a superior Universityof Illinois-Chicago team (ranked eighth in Division Iin the Midwest). Nevertheless, coach Barry DeSil-va’s attitude remains cautious. He repeatedly notedthat his team, although winning games, was missingtoo many opportunities and not putting the ball intothe net often enough. He was also concerned abouthis team’s periodic “let-downs” or “flat” spots.DeSilva’s reservations surfaced Tuesday whenRochester pounded the U of C, 3-0.Thus, Coach DeSilva’s attitude is still reserved.DeSilva feels that his team’s four day break “shouldhelp up.” He also realizes, though, that five games ineight days is a tall order, especially when “we haveto play those same types of teams” as Rochester is.DeSilva noted that Notre Dame, Maryville-St. Louis,and Lake Forest are all physical teams.The Maroons play tomorrow at IIT and Sunday atNotre Dame. The most important game is Tuesday,at home, against Lake Forest. This game could de¬termine the conference championship. Finally, theMaroons play two games in St. Louis next weekend.The next eight days should determine the characterof the team.* * *Answers to last week’s trivia: Rick Wise won thesixth game of the 1975 W'orld Series for Boston, andDick Drago gave up Hank Aaron’s last home run.This week: when was the last time the University ofChicago soccer team won the Midwrest Conferencechampionship? Jane LookMark BlockerAnthony CashmanThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983—17THE RIGHT LOCATION ANDTHE RIGHT PRICE! Spacious Iiv-ing/dining room in this convenientco-op. Modernized kitchen and bath.Low $50’s.LOVELY, SUNNY, ON-CAMPUSco-op apartment. Make this lovely3rd floor 1 bedroom unit your ownspecial retreat. View of midway fromyour dining room. Entertain inspacious, bright living room. Hard¬wood floors. Friendly buidling.Come take a look. Upper teens! Leasewith option possible.GREAT CAMPUS 2 BEDROOMAT Kenwood and 56th Street. Enjoythe bright sunlight of this comer con¬dominium during the day and relax infront of your cozy woodbumingfireplace during the cool fallevenings.ABSOLUTELY SUPER! A 2bedroom. 2 bath co-op with magnifi¬cent space. The condition is perfect.Your dining room is on the water.Well maintained and secure building.South Shore. $30,000.OWNER 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. Checkit out!COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION COT¬TAGE - remodeled inside to makethis 1890’s house into a lovely 1980'shome. Lovely breakfast areaoverlooking private yard, 2 woodbur¬ning fireplaces, parquet flooring, plus4 bedrooms and 2 Vi baths make this aHyde Park special. Call to see.OPEN HOUSEEAST VIEW PARKSaturday, October 15th1-4 p.m.5441 East View Park - Apartment #1BLACKSTONE AVENUE CON¬DOMINIUM - 2 bedroom, lovelybalcony, natural wood built-inbookshelves, eat-in kitchen. This isthe location everyone is looking for.Tree-lined street near campus. Nearshopping and transportation too. Up¬per $60’s.LUXURY CO-OP WITHEAST/.WEST EXPOSURES Thisvery spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bath co¬op is new on the market. It's ail beenredecorated with newly sandedfloors. The building is special - 24hour security, parking, bike room andelegant lobby. Call to see. $50's.CUSTOM DESIGNED KITCHEN,. stripped wood, dining room and extralarge living room make this both acomfortable and gracious entertaininghome. It’s a 3 bedroom, 2 bath co¬op, completely rewired, some tracklighting, outdoor front balcony, andlovely yard. Excellent security alarmsystem, too. Low $60's.CAMPUS LOCATION - immediateoccupancy. Beautiful 2 bedroom con¬do with 2 large enclosed porches.Modem kitchen with full size washerand dryer in apartment, lovelybackyard, hardwood floors, and greatneighbors. $80's.NARRAGANSETT prestigiousEast Hyde Park hi-rise; extra large 2bedroom, 2 bath, and lake viewsmake this a super buy. Doorman,very secure building. Laundry andplayroom, lots of lots of closets. Mid$50’s.FOUR BEDROOM TOWNHOUSEwith recreation room, study, laundry,and yard make this a perfect familyhome. It’s located close to shopping,transportation and U of C campus.Ray School district too! Call to see.Low $100’s.MIDWAY CO-OP. Spectacularsunlight, all natural wood, woodbum¬ing fireplace, gleaming oak floors,and lovely built-in shelving. This 2bedroom, 2 bath co-op has it all. Mid$70’s.ARE YOU LOOKING FOR GREATFINANCING? You’ve got it! Here’sa newly completed condo with 3bedrooms, 2 baths, off-street parkingand a central location.HILD REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St. CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon isS2 for the first line and SI for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at S2 per line. Ads are not accepted 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 exceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publication. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACEE HYDE PARK luxury studio, spectacularview, garage, Indry; public transp at door. S375incl heat/ac. 11/1. Call 241 6016Fern rmmate to share Ig apt wi bale 53rd &Harp S205 incl heat. 752 1512evesShare 4 bdrm 2 ba near campus Avail NOWMust be nonsmoking Fern UC emp 2-7459 daysCOOP FOR SALEImmed. Occupancy on a 2 bedroom, 1 bathwith den coop in South Shore Building & aptwell maintained with easy access to bus &train. S20,000 includes refrigerator, stove,dishwasher and a natural fireplace. Financingavail. Call Mr. Wardian 493 2525or 895 5318.1400 E 56th St. 3 ROOM BASEMENT APTS350/mo. 781-2234 (days) 667-7094 (nites)CONDO FOR SALE56th & Kimbark: 2Bdrm, Eat in Kitchen, pantry, Full Dr, can be used as 3rd Br., Oak Firs.Sunny, Courtyard, $57,000. Call 876 3512 DaysFor Rent-5 Large rooms Two BedroomsS470/mon Also 3 rooms bedroom apartment$320 Vicinity 54th & Harper No Pets Call 7642493.Hyde Park Blvd nr Kimbark 7 rm 4 br Shops.Trans'Cpt, heat, hot water, Quiet. S540, 7525146.Hyde Park 2 bdrms, 2 bths, lake view, 33rd flSec Bldg. S644/mo. 752 6591Share 3 bedroom Townhouse. Near KimbarkPlaza. Rent S300/mo. plus utilities Chuck, 32764001st MONTH FREE Regents Park Apt.Lakeview 2 Bdrm 2 Bth Avail. Dec. 1 S714 2415145 evesRoom for rent with private adjoining fullbathroom in lovely 3-bedroom apt. which hasfireplace, sunporch, backyard, etc. Good location 5539 Blackstone $275. 752 61 14, 241 7767To share 2 bedroom 2 bath unit in UniversityPark Condominiums. Close to shopping andvery secure Located at 55th and DorchesterS300 mo includes heat. Call Jim at 947 831 1.Avail, immediately 2 bdrm. base apt in E HydePark S325 Incl. heat eat in kitch, lots of spaceSecure bldg looking for mature, quiet person(s) 667 2000daytime Eliz or BobLarge 2 Bedroom With Balcony Vicinity COOP Shopping Center S470.00 10/15 Or BeforeAdults. NO PETS 764 24931 Bedroom Apts. Larger unit has been NewlyPainted And Has Remodeled Bath AlsoBalcony $320 00 $420.00 10/15 Or Before AdultsNO PETS 764 2493.AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELYTwo & 3 bedrm. apts at 54th & Woodlawn S435S490/mo. Contact Mr. Quinn 493 2329 ParkerHolsman Company 493 2525.5218 28 WoodlawnOne & 2 bedroom apts. from $360 435 Mo Call643 6428 or Parker Holsman Co 493 2525 Furn Rms. & Gar. Util Inc Non Smok 362 3458FOR SALERUMMAGE SALE: Furniture, clothing,plants, books, etc. Sat., Oct. 15, 8:30 3:00,United Church of Hyde Park, 1448 E 53rd St.1971 Superbeetle 20,000 Mi. on rebuilt engineSunroof, Auto-stick, AM/FM Radio Reliable,especially in winter. S650. 924 1922 before 9MULTI-FAMILY YEAR SALE: Southwestcorner of 7th & Kimbark, Saturday, Oct. 15,10:00 am to 2:00 pm (rain date Sunday.)Loft fr. sngle bed. Prfct fr drm rm. $100 or bst.offer. Call 684 5959. Shelli.Moving Sale: Sleeper sofa, couch, largecarpet, kitchen table, 4 chairs, 363 4967.For Sale writing desk 2 drwrs rl slate top!Desk chair S50 or best offer 241 5063 lv. mssqFree Film!!!Receive One Roll of Film Freewith every color Negative FilmPrinted and Processed atModel Camera 1342 E . 55th St. 493-6700TDK SA 90 Tapes 10 for S29.90. Model Camera1342 E . 55th St. 493-6700.75 PEUGEOT 504 Diesel 48,000 Miles. Silvertan leather sunroof new stereo new Mich xtires always garaged excellent shape best offerOver S2500 phone 962 1069 or 288 3977.FOR SALE: '61 VW looks terrible but it runs.S100 or best offer. Call 288 5697.Rummage Sale. Oct. 22 Sat. 9 am to 6 pm. St.Thomas Apostle 5467 WoodlawnVINTAGE CLOTHING SALE, MonthlyMadness for serious savers. Oct. 15 & 16 12noon 6 pm HEAVEN-ly Happenings at 6981 N.Sheridan.Q szd. bed $75, 12" B&W TV S40 groc ert S5, irng bd S12, aftr 6 pm 288 6158.WANTEDSubjects to come to the Pat Methany Groupconcert. Subjects who love jazz or just want tohave fun, please come! *Tix at Reynolds club'Concert Oct. 22nd *R ight and left hand handedsubjects welcome 'A MAB presentationPEOPLE WANTEDPeople needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language processing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962 8859Seek editor/transcriber with own wordprocessing equipment (or available on Saturdays and experienced on Digital WS211 for onetime project to transcribe tapes and edit, inseveral drafts, 10 hours of discussion on commercial banking, urban affairs and corporatestrategic planning. Experience in these topicareas useful. Send letter only describing priorexperience to : IN DC, P.O. Box 49607, 60649OVERSEAS JOBS Summer year roundEurope, S. Amer., Australia, Asia, All fields.S500-S1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.Write IJC Box 52 IL 5 Corona Del Mar, CA92625.WOMEN JUNIORS & SENIORS needed forpaid study on classroom seating Call 962 7591MWF.QUICK CASH! Need UC Students For GSBLearning Experiment. Earn $3 $6 in 30 60minutes. Call 752 7590 or 752 1427 for an apptor drop by Rosenwald 007 from 15 PM M Ffrom Oct 7 14Babysitter wanted for one year old at least oneevening every weekend. Will pay even if not used Salary Neg. 643 2968. SALES/RETAIL Creative person for sales inquality linen store in Hyde Park Area Canlead to managerial position. Only experiencedneed apply. Call 643 6751.Will pay wood carpenter to fix my rockingchair. Call 493 6879.Spanish and English speaking student to converse with me in Spanish two half hrs. a weekfor S3.00 per half hr. Please call: 241 7520.INTERVIEWERS NEEDEDInterviewers needed for face to face interviews with executives in Cook County. Car isnecessary. $30 and up per 1 hour interviewGrad students only. Call Judy Bourn at 492 7171for detailsI'm looking for someone who's home all ormost weekdays to provide company for a 9 yr.old dog that loves people, is quiet and obedient.My home or yours, will pay well. Please call962-7512 days, 241-7830evenings.Looking for a fulfilling relationship? Tired ofwasting emotions and efforts on a real DUD?Then volunteer! For real contact with real peopie. Ask about internship program. 955 4108.Anyone interested in poll watching for the SGfall elections should contact Mark 684 3196 orSusan 288 2209. Elections are Mon & Tues Oct17 & 18. Poll watchers receive S3.50 hr.Research Assistant. Part Time forbibliographical research, Native Englishspeaker. $375 per hour. M Gross 944 2525COMPUTER PROGRAMMER Growingaudio visual firm has immediate part timeopening for hard working, responsible personwith strong programming background Experience with microcomputers essential.Hours flexible. Please call Mr. Allen at 441 5220for Appt.SECRETARY WANTEDNational city planning research organizationseeks an experienced self-starter for full timeposition as research secretary. Requires highschool diploma, 2 to 3 years experience assecretary. Familiarity with IBM MemoryTypewriter helpful. Job includes keeping trackof records plus supervision of support staff Uof C area. S 13,000 to $14,000 salary References.Call 955 9100.EMPLOYMENT WANTEDExperienced Research Methodologist Consultin many areas of application: medicine, social,behavioral and physical sciences, Researchdesign and statistical analysis. SAS. BMDP.SPSS. Call 241-5854 Keep trying.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES and has a memory Phone955 4417.JAME S BON E, editor typist, 363 0522MOVING & HAULING. Discount PricesFree—Packing Service. Free—EstimatesFree—Packing boxes & crates delivered N CFree—Padding & dollies. References. Call Bill493 9122.TYPING by Experienced Secretary Thesis,Manuscripts, Tables, etc. Grammar Corrected. 667 8657.The Center for Clinical and EducationalPsychology offers Psychotherapy for a widerange of problems from self esteem and learning to psychosomatic disorders. Call and speakwith us. Dobbi Kerman 667 4176, 664 6650.TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924 1 152.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Reasonable 6846882.PASSPORT photos while you wait. On Campus. Other photo services available 962 6263."On Nov. 17th,adopt a friendwho smokes"Help a friend get throughthe day without a cigaretteThey might just quitforever. And that'simportant Because goodfriends are hard to findAnd even tougher to loseTHE GREAT AMERICAN SM0KE0UT’AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY mNow in stock$11995model camera1342 E. 55th493-670018—Th. ’’icago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983(1 ENROLL NOW. Thai and Chinese cookingclasses. Bring appetite & enthusiasm Experienced ter.Wendy Gerick 538 1324CUSTOM CATERING. Let me create theunusual for you. Far Eastern & Europeanspecialties.Wendy Gerick - 538 1324General and legal typing services. Promptpick up and delivery. Contact Victoria Gordon(752 1983)I CLEAN apts., houses, etc. Quick, thorough,expier., local ref. Dave 684-5835 keep tryingProf. Typist Editor. Good Rates 667 7895TEMPA'S TYPING SERVICE Fast, accurateservice at reasonable rates Call 324 1660anytime.LARRY'S MOVING SERVICE Only $15 hourfor van and labor. Free cartons, padding. 6678327.Typing Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. All projects welcome 791 1674.SWENSON'S TYPING SERVICESReasonable rates. Clean, fast, efficient Callnow 752-5227.You can apret INDIAN MUSIC, play Sitar,Tabla know theory to Improvise on any instr493-1080The Better Image Stuido is still booking outdoor family portrait sessions as long asweather permits. The Better Image 1344 E.55th St. 643-6262 (by appointment).Hyde Park's newest photography studio is currently booking October & November weddings.The Better Image Studio 1344 E 55th St 6436262 (by appointment).SCENESWRITERS' WORKSHOP 752 8377Sign up to sell your stuff at Ida Noyes FleaMarket 10/15 S2 fee call 962 9554—SAO event.SG PETITIONS DUE. Nominating petitionsfor Student Gov't's fall election are due todayin Ida Noyes 306 by 5.00pm. Elections are Mon& TuesOct 17 & 18.WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY PRACTICE.Mon 8, Wed at Washington Park (57th 8, overthe hill) and Tues. & Thurs. at Stagg Field.Warmup 3:30 - 4:00 p.m. Workout starts at 4 00p.m. Any questions contact Coach Sood: 9629556 (wk.)BLACK MARIAA Chicago based women's literary magazinecelebrates its anniversary issue with readingsby local contributors. Tues., Oct. 18, 7:15PM,Women & Children 1st, 922 W. ArmitagePERSONALSA thank-you to all students who worked at theHumanities Open House. You were great1LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Green 3 ringed binder containing imptnotes. If found, please call Tony at 324 4305Reward10-5 pillow with Barbara written on it if foundleave message for Jean in 727.753 2220GAY? LESBIAN?GALA holds a coffeehouse every Tues 9pm at5446 S. Kimbark conversation, Old'new friends(and food) in a warm unpressured setting. Allare welcome.THEATRE DISCOUNTSThe 1942s Radio Hour, Martha Graham DanceCo. A Raisin in the Sun, a Christmas Carol, inthe Belly of the Beast: Letters from Prison.Call 962 9554 for info.A RAISININ THE SUNTue Oct 25 7:30pm tickets $11 Tickets on saleuntil Oct 23, call 962 9554 for infoIMAR00N -If 96295551SHARE LIFE —DONATE BLOODI« university of Chicagomedical centerBLOOOBANKCall 962-6247 for appointment IN THE BELLY OFTHE BEASTThur Oct 27 8pm tickets $9 tickets on sale untilOct 25 call 962-9554 for info.HYPERTENSION: MIND-BODY CONNECTIONA film Hypertension: The Mind Body Connection on the Menninger Bio Behavioral Treatment of Essential Hypertension which enablesthe average patient to normalize bloodpressure & become medication free in 20 wks.will be shown Free Fri. Oct. 14 and Tues. Oct.18 at The Center for Clinical and EducationalPsychology, 1525 E. 53rd. Suite 707. Find outmore about our program RSVP Dobbi Kerman 667-4176, 664 6650. Refreshments served.FLEAMARKET 10/15Browse for bargains-lOam 4pm Ida NoyesParking lot (if rains Ida Noyes Gym) an SAOevent.DANCETERICACan make your next party a success for less!$99 includes full sound system Call 241 6438 forreferences or more informationMABTEASER"SHHHH." don't tell...PAT METHENYGROUP is coming! Mab presents live in concert the best of jazz fusion. October 22 8pmMandel Hall Don't miss it!DOES YOUR MINDMATTER?It does to us. Right and left-handed peopleneeded tor paid participation in studies onright left brain function. Call 962 8846, 9 5, MF.FICTION WRITINGUnique/intense method releases yr creativeenergy. 1st session free. Sat noon. Call ShouriDaniels, 667 0673. $150 for 50 hrs.BEAUTIFUL ORIENTALCARPETS ARE BACK!This fall, my fourth year, I offer carpets personally selected from abroad as well as NewEngland estates. All carpets, whether new orantique, are in superb condition. Included are4x7, 5x11, 9x12 antique Rose Sarouks; elegantroomsize Ersari (elephant-foot design) in deepburgundy; subtly-colored Persians; assortedprayer rugs, camel bags and village rugs; antique Caucasian and Turkman carpets. I alsohave a small collection of rare antiqueTurkman silver jewelry. As usual, prices arevery fair. You may phone for an appt or attendmy fall OPEN HOUSE on October 22 & 23.David Bradley 288 0524 levenings &weekends).COMPUTATION CENTERFREE 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 of 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 E60th), from 8:30 to 4:30, Monday FridayCopies of the Social Science Advisor in Pick123, the Program Advisor at Usite and the Terminal Attendant at Usite.marian realty,inc.m, REALTORStudio and 1 BedroomApartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684-5400 The seminars include introductions to the MVSoperating system and the ACF2 securitypackage on the IMB 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 processing system on the DECSYSTEM 20 computers, courses on the FORTRAN programming language and the SPSSX statisticalpackage as well as other introductory topicsIf 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. DONCRABBALL DAY GROUPTOWARD MORE MEANINGFUL RELATIONSHIPS: A contact experience for menand women. All day group at the CHICAGOCOUNSELING CENTER 5711 S. WoodlawnSat. Oct. 22 10am-6pm $40. For information callMargaret 684 1800.FREE CAMERACHECK-UPDoes Your Camera Cough and Sputter? Have itchecked free at Model Camera Sat. Oct 22 103:30 call for details Model Camera 1342 E 55thSt 493-6700COMING OUT?GALA now hosts a coming out group everyTues. at 8:00pm at 5446 S. Kimbark to tackleissues of being gay on campus and at home.Followed at 9:00 by the GALA Coffeehouse Allare welcome.GAY HEALTH ISSUESGay health issues will be the topic of this TuesCoffeehouse. A gay physician will make apresentation and answer questions. All arewelcome.KOREAN DINNER PARTYKimchi, Bulgogi 8. Rice Sat. Oct. 15 at 6.00 International House 2nd Floor Call Kim 324 8132 KOREAN COURSESBeginning Interm ers & Korean History EverySat 11:00-1 00Cobb hall 203214 Call 324 8132JAZZERCISE INTO FALLWarm up, workout and dance your way intoFall with Jazzercise! Classes are at 6 and 7 pmon Tuesdays and Thursdays in The GameRoom of The Blue Gargoyle, 5655 UniversityAve Register before class For more information call 436 4115.PROSPECTS FOR PEACEIN EL SALVADORLatin American Studies Center in cooperationwith the International House Speaker Seriespresents Guillermo Manual Ungo, President ofthe Revolutionary Democratic Front of ElSalvador Monday, Oct. 17 at 3 00 pm at the International House Assemble Hall, 1414 E 59thSt Admission freePUBMOVIETHE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT (THE WHO isalright). Tues & Wed, 11pm Members, 21 .PUB BASEBALLWorld Series tonight, 7pm & SPECIAL OPENINGS Sat. 11:30 am & if necessary Sun 3.30 pmMembers, 21-KMETHUSALEM AND SHAMConcrete Gothic Theatre PresentsMuthusalem by Yvon Goll and Sham by FrankTompkins. These plays will be seen in theReynolds Club First Floor Theatre on Oct.14,15.21,23 at 8 pm. Tickets are only S2students, S3 General. Come and support student theatreC.G. THEATERConcrete Gothic Theater presents Methusalemby Yvon and Sham by Frank Tompkins on October 14, 15, 21, 22, 23 at 8pm in the ReynoldsClub First Floor Theatre Tickets are S2students, S3 general admission. Come and support student theater.MAROON962-9555as/otfe3%ea/ (oj/a/e493-0666 • CALL ANYTIMEBRICK HOUSE WITHATTACHED “DRIVE-INGARAGE”One of the newest in HydePark near 54 BlackstoneGrand plan on three levels-four bedrooms-new autumnmarket $149,000.BUILT AS A CO-OP,BEAUTIFULLY MANAGED,BEAUTIFULLY MAINTAINEDNear 59 StonyStunning expanse of 41 feetside by side living room anddining room. Spacious,gracious formal living. TwoBedrooms, two baths, newkitchen. Garage Access.$52,500The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983—19IntroducingEL LUGAR’SSTUDENTDINNER SPECIAL5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.\with purchase over $250(One coupon per customer only)COUPON GOOD FROM OCT. 14 to OCT. 21EL LUGARSimply great tasting Mexican food!1603 E. 55th St.684-6514A Subsidiary of MORRY’S DELI 11 a.m.-9p.m.MONDAY - SATURDAY20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, October 14, 1983