— —mThe Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 18 The University of Chicago & Copyright 1983 The Chicago Maroon Friday, November 4, 1983SG overruled, radio gets fundsTom UhlPercy backs invasionBy Veronika KotThe following is from Sena¬tor Percy’s (D-Illinois) meet¬ing with the press immediatelyfollowing his address at Man-del Hall Monday during theUSA/USSR “Search for Solu¬tions” conference.Asked about the US invasionof Grenada, Percy said that“going through Chicago thisweek...there seems to be avery strong body of support forthat, but as I talked to the stu¬dents here last night, particu¬larly the women students — Ithink that women tend to dif¬ferentiate from men in this re¬gard; more women are fearfulof war or are more skepticaland negative about it.”Percy replied to a queryabout his own opinion of the in¬vasion with a question of hisown: “Well, from the evidenceI’ve seen, what do they need a10,000-foot airstrip for in thatlittle island...?”Percy affirmed that the in¬vasion has damaged US credi¬bility, bat added, “The nextquestion will be, What will theythink a month from now as theevidence unfolds? Not onlywere they building a 10,000-footrunway, which they certainlydon’t need for a little islandparadise down there, but whatwere they ordering? All these— all this military equipment from the Soviet Union...Whatwere they up to. And everyonedown there, every nationstatedown there, they were going toexport revolution to all of themand undermine all of them justas they have their own citi¬zens.During the press conference,Percy took a strong standagainst reinstatement of thedraft. He said he was “verymuch against” it and thatthere is a “far higher quality ofindividual volunteering than ifwe had a draft.”The question of Grenada re¬curred, specifically concern¬ing whether the American peo¬ple had been told the truthabout what was going on there.continued on page 14 By Cliff Grammichand Ravi RajmaneIn a rare overturn of a Fi¬nance Committee decision, theStudent Government generalassembly raised funding toWHPK radio station from $0 to$4372 for the station’s use.WHPK had originally re¬quested $10,840 from the Stu¬dent Government FinanceCommittee (SGFC). SGFC hadturned this request down forseveral reasons. According toSGFC chairman Rick Szesny,reservations by the commit¬tee’s members rose over theuncertainty over the station’sfuture management (stationmanager Tom Uhl is leavingwinter quarter); the nature ofthe station’s expenses, i.e., isnew equipment for the stationnecessary; and the fact thatmeeting WHPK’s requestwould see the Finance Com¬mittee already exceed allot¬ments given to WHPK duringall of last year. “The FinanceCommittee has been overlygenerous with WHPK,” Szesnysaid.The Assembly, though, be¬lieves that more money to thestation at this time is worth¬while. Assembly memberSteve Levitan summed upthese feelings saying that“shoving a few more thousanddollars into the radio station isworthwhile” in the hope thatthe administration will matchthe SG funds.Szesny called the reversal“a tragedy,” saying “SG hasput itself in a position theydon’t understand.” Szesny andthe Finance Committee havebeen trying to get the adminis¬tration to put up funds forWHPK’s operation, and it washoped that the denial by SGFCfor radio funding would pres¬sure administration officialsinto appropriating monies foroperation. Szesny added thatthe decision “will cost a greatdeal of money.”Uhl does not believe SGFC denial of funds for the stationwill help in gaining moneyfrom the administration. Hesaid that with its appeal, thestation was “trying to show re¬alistically how much it costs torun this place.” He added,“It’s doubtful the Universitywill listen to us” if WHPKcould not gain SG funding.Future funding for the sta¬tion is uncertain, but Uhl be¬lieves the station “certainlycan’t continue with the currentfunding arrangement.”The 1971 charter establish¬ ing the station provided forWHPK to be funded by a com¬mittee which appropriatedfunds from the collection of theStudent Activities Fee. Szesnysaid that last year, Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell re¬voked provisions for the sta¬tion to get funds from thedean’s funds; however, Szesnyadded, with the exception offunds provided by the CollegeVisiting Committee forWHPK’s move to 100 watts, thestation has always receivedfunds from SGFC.CPS adds $77g fundsto work/studyBy Michael ElliottThe Office of Career andPlacement Services (CPS) isusing $77,000 in supplementalfunds to place 70 students inthe Work/Study program whowere eligible for jobs but weredenied salaries because of fi¬nancial problems, according toJulie Monson, director of CPS.Roger Weiss, a student in theCollege, said, “It took helpfrom the assistant dean of stu¬dents and the dean of students,but I’ve finally got a job.”The supplemental funds,granted last Thursday by theDepartment of Education,were authorized after manystudents notified of eligibilityfor Work/Study were deniedjobs because of lack of moneyto pay their salaries.For a variety of reasons, in¬cluding increased interestfrom campus employers, acci¬dental inclusion of additionalstudents into the program, andan increase in the percentageof wage paid by federal fundsfrom 60 percent to 70 percent,the Work/Study program wasunable to fund approximately130 students who foundWork/Study jobs but had notmade referral appointmentsHARC to deal with housingBy Alan SierkowskiSeveral groups concernedwith student life this quarterrecently formed the HousingActivities Resource Council(HARC). The Inter-HouseCouncil, the office of StudentHousing, and a subcommitteeof the Student Advisory Com¬mittee formed HARC in re¬sponse to widespread studentdiscontent with the housingsystem.“In reviewing the annualhousing surveys and in talkingto students.” said Connie Holo-Computers: part IVpage sevenInsideInterview withPandit Ravi ShankarGCJ page 10 man, director of student hous¬ing, “we felt there was aserious lack of social life in thehousing system and that someorganization should be formedto promote inter-dorm andinter-house activities.”HARC has already begun tofill that role. The first suchevent to be partially funded byHARC was a Shoreland-Green-wood Halloween party. In ad¬dition, HARC is helping fund aBlackstone-Greenwood foot¬ball game/party this weekend.Breckinridge, Pierce, Wood¬ward, Burton-Judson, andHitchcock-Snell are currentlydrawing up proposals for simi¬lar events.Each dorm’s council elects arepresentative to HARC. Theeleven-member HARC com¬mittee oversees a temporarybudget of $2500 to sponsor in¬terdorm activities.The Housing office put up$2000 to IHC’s $500 for HARC’sinitial budget. Three to fourweeks after these funds runout, a referendum will be heldto determine whether a hous¬ing activities fee should be in¬stituted. Such a fee, to be as¬sessed on students in thehousing system, would be $2-3and provide HARC with a$12-15,000 annua! budget. Michael Aronson"W’e hope that some sort offorum will be held in eachhouse to describe what HARCis and what it is about,” saidHoloman. “I definitely thinkthere is a need for activitiesbetween dorms but the stu¬dents will have to make thefinal decision.”IHC has taken on a more ad¬visory role with respect todorm life since HARC’s estab¬lishment. Rather that foster¬ing dorm activities, IHC hasfocused on non-social concernsof dorm life, such as the re¬quired meal contract. Some Julie Monsonbefore Oct. 26. Weiss was oneof those students.“I got a job first week,coaching primary school kidsin basketball for the Blue Gar¬goyle,” said Weiss. “They(CPS) told me it would be twoto three weeks before I couldget a referral appointment, butnot to worry, my salary wouldbe made up once I got into theprogram.”Having missed his first re-continued on page 11concernsquestioned last year if IHCshould be continued, but thishas been forgotten with HARCand the resulting improvementin IHC’s image.“IHC should have disbandedlast year because it was doingnothing,” said Michael Aron¬son, IHC vice-president andHARC chairman. “But it ismuch more effective this yearand is making a good, honesteffort to improve conditionsthrough a broad spectrum ofdormitory life.”IHC is currently reviewingthe housing system’s disciplin¬ary code's merits and short¬comings, and will present itsfindings to the housing office atthe end of the year. IHC hasalso established a supportcommittee for HARC to helpdifferent dorms prepare andorganize inter-dorm activities.The council also hopes tocreate a fact-finding commit¬tee to investigate the distribu¬tion of vending machine reve¬nues and the inequity oflaundry costs at Shoreland,Pierce, and Woodward.“IHC’s basic concern rightnow is discipline in the dormsand housing services in gener¬al,” said Bob Nesselroth, trea¬surer/secretary of IHC.continued on page 10n!UMI- .-'U0SB0'£v‘V:ff$gk.'h;,V? VV"-Vyy,v: "gyfiyi:'-w ' ■'liis* ■vy J --«*%®Sp!rtei;, V :/■ XV:y;:v.VfX3Vy :-fit'3v;3,v v " ;Txvv:. .,Vi. y ;V:.- V...^:;v-.'V,7fey jV,.. V- 3 ,.;V V;V'v-V-..': V,'. , . . , , ■: , . ' . .MEMORIAL LECTURES:■■,■'■■■■■■ ■ ■ : ■' ' ■ ■ ■ ■ " ^1983-84■s&afr*Evolutionary History, Historiographyand Literacy Criticism: Variations onthe Theme of How Do We Know WhatWe Do Not KnowTHOMAS J. M. SCHOPFDept, of the Geophysical SciencesCommittee on Evolutionary BiologyNov. 8 Metaphorical Readings of EvolutionaryHistory: Living FossilsNov. 15 History as Accident: Loss of CertaintyNov. 22 Accident Becomes Design: SpeciesOriginateNov. 29 Design Becomes History: Patterns areBornDec. 6 Laws of History: How Well Do We KnowWhat We Do Not KnowTuesday Evenings8:00 P.M.Hinds Geophysical LaboratoryHoorn 1015734 S. EllisThe Dean of the CollegeCordially Invites You to theSecond Annual Sunrise ExcursionTo the Wooded Island in Jackson ParkCOME CELEBRATE:—having an hour more daylight in the morning—autumn foliage on the Island's remarkablecollection of trees and shrubs—the serene early morning scene of the IslandMONDAY, NOVEMBER 7RAIN OR SHINEPROGRAM:6:45 A.M. Brisk walk or jog from campus to Wooded Island7:00 A.M. Walk around Island and Japanese Garden7:45 A.M. Return to campusPoint of Departure:^ ^ >.*' \ ' if. ■■ "■ "5- ■■■■.■ ■1"* 2- •_ . „ ' ■ :• (QJaA,:vJb i?av- rWoodward<ourt foyer at 6:45led by fames Teen, Master of thei S< ienr es ( n . V.e ,, .. Division^ ^ ' '.«■ :;.yV,3vV :A y-;V 3 33' e.;. V'.PCROUP B Leaves front of Shoreland at 6:45 ledby Donald Levine, Dean of the 'CnlK '4: eX- «V-y.y a.:—2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday November 4,71983,,7y333.7 ,:-xy333:v,; wmm3 :'.,333^iioeV ■ THE HKDWIG I.. EOEBFELLOWSHIPFOR UNDERGRADUATEThe Hedwig L. Loeb Fellowship, establishedin 1977 to support undergraduate research, isaccepting research proposals for the Winterand Spring Quarters of 1984.Proposals should be submitted to theAssociate Dean of the College in Harper241, by Friday, November 18,1983Proposals must contain a description of theproject and research method, an estimatedbudget indicating the quarter it is to be used,and a letter evaluating the proposal from amember of the Faculty.For research that requires use of a Universityfacility (e.g., laboratory), a letter agreeing tothis use must be submitted by an appropriatemember of the Faculty.Awards may range up to $600.00. Onlyresearch related expenses will be consideredfor support (living expenses are notsupportable). isswf-7ipflyi!3Vr333 IvlispfV I *1-1 VfeiVs: ■' ■■ ■■ 7 3;3/3Xxxffv.33#Xi33;"'^XV'fyVIEWS IN BRIEFChild choir benefitThe Chicago Children’s Choir willhold its sixth annual auction tomorrowat the First Unitarian Church, 5650 S.Woodlawn Ave. Open viewing begins at6:30 p.m., and the auction itself (withprofessional auctioneer Bob Haley incharge) starts at 7. A wine and cheeseparty will take place from 5:30 to 6:30;tickets at $3.50 will be available at thedoor.The variety of items available to auc¬tion bidders includes a decorator’sfloor vase; meals at local restaurants;gourmet cooking utensils; children’sdesks; furniture; lamps; downhill skisand boots. All proceeds will help sup¬port the programs of the Chicago Chil¬dren’s Choir. Admission is free.Saturday flea marketThe Parent Support Network’s FleaMarket, featuring maternity clothes,baby and children’s clothes, toys, carseats, and other items related to chil¬dren, will be held this Saturday from 10a.m. to 1 p.m. in the basement of theHyde Park Union Church at 5600 S.Woodlawn. Sellers are welcome to re¬serve a table for a $3.50 fee, or to do¬nate items to the Parent Support Ne¬twork for resale.For more information, call SheilaBoss at 955-0238.Computer classesThe Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter (HPJCC) will hold a computerawareness program beginning Nov. 14at the HPJCC, 1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd.There will be four two-hour sessionswith hands-on experience using TexasInstruments computers.The classes will include actual ca¬sework and programming using TIBASIC and TI LOGO languages. Regis¬tration will be limited so that all partic¬ipants will have maximum computertime.Richard M. Rubin, trained by Texas Instruments, will teach the class.Section 1 will be held Monday eve¬nings, Nov. 14, 21, 28, and Dec. 5. Sec¬tion 2 will be held Tuesday evenings,Nov. 15, 22, 29, and Dec. 6. All sessionsare from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.Fees are $55 for members of theHPJCC and $80 for non-members. Reg¬istration deadline is Nov. 7. For moreinformation call 268-4600.Health ed conferenceThe March of Dimes Birth DefectsFoundation and the American MedicalStudent Association have undertaken acooperative project at the nationallevel designed to address the concernsand issues surrounding the preparationof adolescents today for responsibleparenting tomorrow.Response to orientation conferencesheld last summer was high, and it isanticipated that the conference slatedfor Chicago Nov. 5 and 6, at the Univer¬sity of Illinois Medical School, willhave an attendance of 150 to 200 medi¬cal students from throughout the cen¬tral Midwestern states.Conference workshops will coverproblems teens encounter in obtaininghealth care and education, methods forcommunicating effectively u'ith youngpeople, and designing and implement¬ing programs to meet their needs. Thekeynote address will be presented byEffie O. Ellis, MD, consultant to theMarch of Dimes and the City of Chica¬go Department of Human Services.Following the conference, March ofDimes and American Medical StudentAssociation representatives will meetto discuss local programming initia¬tives to be developed jointly in their re¬spective areas.Diabetic exerciseReviewing latest trends in diabetestreatment, the Diabetes Research andTraining Center will focus on “Exer¬cise and Newer Approaches to Diet’’ atthe Nuv. 8 meeting of the South Subur¬ ban Branch of the American DiabetesAssociation. The meeting will be at7:30 p.m. in the Flossmoor Village Hallfeaturing speakers Christine Beebe,MS, RD, Cindy Barkus, RN, and Bar¬bara Fischer, RN from the DiabetesResearch and Training Center in Chi¬cago.There are over 400,000 residents ofNorthern Illinois affected by diabetesand the South Suburban Branch of theAmerican Diabetes Association is oneof the many groups which offer lec¬tures, seminars, and films to help edu¬cate the public about diabetes detec¬tion, treatment, and research.The meeting is free and the public iswelcome. For more information con¬tact the American Diabetes Associa¬tion at 346-1805.HPJCC’s The Elephant ManThe Elephant ManThe Hyde Park Jewish CommunityCenter is presenting “The ElephantMan” Nov. 12 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 13 at 3and 8 p.m. at International House. 1414E. 59th St. Tickets are $6 and $4This production is partially subsi¬dized by a grant from the Illinois ArtsCouncil, and is directed by Michael Hil¬debrand.For reservations and information,call 268-4600. . English careers dayJob opportunities for students whomajor in English or communicativearts will be discussed at a “CareerDay” conference to be held Wednesdayfrom 9:30 a m. to 3:30 p.m. at Roose¬velt University.Open to the public without charge,the program will consist of morninglectures, a panel discussion at 1:30p.m. on “The Liberal Arts Major andthe Part-Time Career,” and a talk byRoosevelt Career Planning and Place¬ment Director Art Eckberg at 2:30p.m. titled “Who’s Out There LookingFor You?”Speakers in the morning will be fromthe Publicity Club of Chicago; Roose¬velt; Northwestern Mutual Life;Words Unlimited, Inc.; and the publicdefender’s office. Among the topics tobe presented are “How to Make a Liv¬ing from Other People’s Bad Prose”and “Internships: Getting More than aFoot in the Door.”For detailed program informationcall Roosevelt’s English Departmentat 341-3710.Chinese ceramicsYutaka Mino will speak tomorrow on“The Golden Period: Song Dynasty Ce¬ramics,” the second in a series of threelectures to be held in conjunction withthe Field Museum’s major new exhibit,“Treasures from the Shanghai Muse¬um : 6,000 Years of Chinese Art.” whichopens to the public tomorrow.Yutaka Mino is the curator of the De¬partment of Oriental Art at the India¬napolis Museum of Art, and is alsoserving as the Field Museum’s guestcurator for the Shanghai exhibit.Tickets are $5 ($3 for museummembers). All tickets can be pur¬chased in advance by mail or in personfrom the Museum's Education Depart¬ment Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.through 4 p.m. Tickets may also bepurchased at the west door one hourbefore the lecture.The University of ChicagoBookstoreFrom Tuesday November 8To Tuesday November 15Loeb ClassicsandOxford Classical Textsat 1/3 OFF LIST PRICEThe Bookstore will offer these excellent books to students, faculty, friends,neighbors at extraordinary savings, many of these books have simply oc¬cupied shelf space too long, and therefore we hope you will take advantageof this amazing sale.All sales final. No refunds or exchanges.Supplies are limited. Sorry, no rainchecks.Stuart BrentManagerGeneral Book DepartmentUniversity of Chicago Bookstore970 East 58th StreetFirst FloorPhone: 962-7712The Chicago Maroon—Friday Novemher 4 19K9—3Let’s ao Dutch1 Profs debate GrenadaW ** *w * * * Bv Steuart Pittman the Grenadines. The seeHow nice that the Student Government Assembly has seen fit to grantWHPK $4372, up from the Finance Committee’s recommendation of $0.While we commend the Assembly members on their rare display of de¬fiance against the Finance Committee (does this indicate a newtrend?), we wonder about their rationale in expecting the administra¬tion to pitch in an equal sum.Last year, SG funding of WHPK amounted to some 13 percent of theyear’s Student Activities Fee. At that time, the administration ex¬pressed little active commitment to the station except through nervousconcern (‘‘How will they survive?”) and enlistment of the College Visit¬ing Committee of interested community members, et. al,, to help raisethe funds necessary to keep WHPK on the air.Is the Assembly being naive by extending its commitment in hopesthat the administration will do the same? Precedent indicates that theanswer is yes. But was the Finance Committee being fair to WHPK bywithholding funding in hopes that the Dean's office would help out?The persistent tendency on the part of SG to base its decisions on theadministration’s response to its actions — or what students think will bethe response — is hardly viable when dealing with student organizationssuch as WHPK that need the funding to continue their programs.If the Assembly has to grant the station funding to draw the adminis¬tration’s attention to this cause, and if Assembly representatives cannotdiscuss the matter on an open basis with University officials, then thereis a lot of work to be done in the area of student/administration com¬munication.From those SG members who voted for the grant without the expecta¬tion that the administration would match (or near) the Assembly’s allo¬cation, we are interested in hearing their interpretations of the out¬come. By Steuart PittmanThree speakers gave their interpre¬tations of recent events in Grenada.Wednesday evening before over 100people in the East Lounge of I-House.Professor John Coatsworth of the Uof C and James Blaut, University of Il¬linois at Chicago professor andmember of the US-Grenada FriendshipSociety, spoke out against the invasionwhile Larry Horist of L.P. Horist & As¬sociates, a public affairs firm, arguedpro-invasion. CAUSE, the organizerand sponsor of the discussion, apolo¬gized at the outset for the two-to-onelineup, reading a long list of local con¬servative intellectuals who had de¬clined the offer to speak.First to bat was Coatsworth, who sa¬crificed the first of his 15 allotted min¬utes to express his support for CAUSEin their attempts to regain StudentGovernment funding. He began hiscase by reading a description of theOcean Venture ’81 military maneuverscarried out by US, NATO, and someLatin American forces six months afterReagan took office. The Caribbeanphase of these maneuvers included amock invasion of an island off the Coastof Puerto Rico dubbed Amber and theAmberdines, rather than Grenada andA letter on CAUSE funding cutTo the editor:I would like to lodge a note of protestover a recent Student Government de¬cision to deny funding to CAUSE andthe campus group on disarmament. Iam a member of neither, so I have no“special interest” in the matter. But asa member of the University communi¬ty, I find the SG decision alarming.The issue is, in a nutshell: should stu¬dent money be used to fund these twogroups. SG says no because they bothpromote a particular “ideology,” I dis¬agree.Neither group is ideological. Ratherthey are issue oriented. Members ofCAUSE seem united in their abhor¬rence of external intervention of anykind in Central America while those inthe disarmament group seem commit¬ted to a nuclear free world. Period.This hardly constitutes an ideology. Inthe real world (i.e., anyplace north of47th Street and south of the Midway),these positions are advocated and sup-Knocks BowinTo the editor:I am disappointed that you gave sucha prominent position to the letter ofJohn Bowin in the Oct. 28 issue of thenewspaper. Such action discredits thepro-choice stance, because not onlywas the letter invective and satirical,but it did not address the points whichare central to women’s rights andabortion. Even the facts the authordoes enlist ignore obvious corollaries:the genetic complement of the zygote isnot the same as that of the mother, norwill incubation of biopsies elicit dif¬ferentiation. Polemical statements,such as the letter of John Bowin, are ofno benefit in reaching a consensus onmatters which are controversial andnot immediately clear.Gregg BendrickFourth-year student in the College ported by individuals across a wide-range of political, religious and nation¬al boundaries. Members of SG seemoblivious to this fact.More importantly, members of SGseem dangerously confused as to whattheir own purposes actually are. Asidefrom filling up space on their lawschool applications, it is their responsi¬bility to encourage student activity, notto judge whether these activities are“correct” or not.As a second-year graduate student, Ihave come to see that sizeable numbersin our community feel it necessary tofund a black group, a gay group, awomen’s group and a group calling themselves the Young Democrats.Each one of these organizations has itsown particular political “viewpoints.”SG is right in choosing not to interferewith the way these “viewpoints” arepromoted. SG is wrong in doing so withCAUSE and the disarmament group.Student Government does not exist tojudge the validity of student interests.Rather, it exists to promote student ac¬tivity. In denying funding to CAUSEand the disarmament group, SG hasgrossly abused its power. Moreover, ithas violated the very reason it exists., Mark HornungSecond-year graduate student,political scienceChatham resident gives factsTo the editor:This is a response to the 10/28 letterto the editor from Messrs. Fox, King,and Douglas:Allow me to draw your attention toan excerpt from Congressional Quar¬terly’s 1982 description of the twenty-two Illinois Congressional Districts:“The First District contains theheart of Chicago’s black SouthSide, an area that has been im¬portant in local politics since the1920s — before most Northerncities even had substantial blackpopulations. Although it is a very poor area, with the decayingbuildings common to the innercity everywhere, it also has astable black middle class. In the1960s, when blacks on the moretransient West Side rioted, thisarea was quiet.Before World War II, most ofthe city’s black population wasconcentrated here, just west ofthe wealthy residential areas onthe shore of Lake Michigan. Butin recent years, as color barriershave fallen in other parts of thecity and its southern suburbs,people have been leaving theTo the editor:Of all the misconceptions advancedin his letter to the editor, Mr. Bowin’smost glaring one is his conception ofhuman life. The idee fixe which propelsthe little thought put into his little letteris that human life can be reduced to anaggregation of biological processes de¬pendent on the cell. Assuming thatThe Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice per week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon are in IdaNoyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304. Phone 962-9555.Anna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorSondra KruegerFeatures EditorPurnima DubeyAssistant Features Editor Frank LubySports EditorPeter OsterlundViewpoints EditorAra JelalianPhotography EditorJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal Editor Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerCampbell McGrathChicago Literary Review EditorAssociate Editors: Michael Elliott, Koyin Shih.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, Ravi Rajmane,Leah Schlesinger, Nathan Schoppa, Hilary Till, Bob Travis, John Vispoel, Jordan Wan-koff, Jeff Wolf.♦—Hie Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4,1983 abortion foes share his belief, he ridi¬cules the cellular basis fo the sanctityof human life, supposedly showing“Right To Lifers..how untenable theirposition is.” Since he treats the heart¬felt arguments of Pro-Lifers with con¬tempt, it would be fitting to treat his,er, arguments with equal contempt.However, when the subject of discus¬sion is human life, Pro-Lifers are notparticularly fond of ridiculing the sub¬ject. I shall therefore attempt an ap¬proach opposite from Br. Bowins’s, at¬tacking ridiculousness with reasoninstead of the reverse.Mr. Bowin, as everyone knows, has aright to believe that human life is cel-luarly determined. But if he pretendsto attack Pro-Lifers on their own levelof argument, he blunders when he as¬sumes that all Pro-Lifers share his be¬lief. Many, if not most, of us prefer toseize the moral high ground and argueagainst abortion on a spiritual level.We oppose abortion precisely becausewe do not agree with Mr. Bowin thathuman life depends solely on its cellu¬lar composition. We do not wish to“award full human citizenship” to a the Grenadines. The scenario includedthe taking of “American hostages” andthe “installation of a regime favorableto the way of life we espouse.”The implication was that the invasionhad been thoroughly planned. Coats¬worth also made clear his charge thatthe action was a blatant violation ofthree international treaties. It was anact, he said, of “open, naked, unlawfulaggression,” typical of US policy in theCaribbean from the Spanish-AmericanWar to the present. The US has defend¬ed “economic and strategic military in¬terests” in the area at the expense ofthe interests of weaker states. He ar¬gued very simply that whenever asmall country exists near a large andpowerful one, it is in the interest of thesmall state to cultivate close ties to out¬side powers as a counterbalance. Coun¬tries in the Caribbean and CentralAmerica that have pursued this bal¬ance, whether pre- or post-World WarII, have generally been overthrown, hesaid.Finally, Professor Coatsworth ques¬tioned the validity of the national secu¬rity justification for control of the area.61°45' 6t°30‘Reasons to ridiculous pro-choicer Soviet missiles in Nicaragua or Gren¬ada, he said, would be far less effectivethan those already on submarines 3.1miles off our coasts. Since both revolu¬tionary Grenada and Nicaragua of¬fered to conform to US strategic andmilitary requirements in the pastCoatsworth believes that the influencesought by the US goes much deeper.Horist took on what he called his“yeoman’s duty” with a sense ofhumor, even toward himself when heconfused Guyana with Ghana. He de¬scribed US policy as necessarily a mix¬ture of moral ism and pragmatism, thebasic premise of which is to allow for“the determination of people to choosetheir own governments.” As examplesof this policy’s successes he noted theWestern European countries afterWorld War II, comparing them to thenon-democratic nations of EasternEurope. What is crucial about our sys¬tem, he says, is that it is maturing, evi¬dence of which he found in the abolitionof slavery and the end to the expansion¬ism of the 1800’s. “We are fighting thefight of ideals and we have largely doneit in a civilized and non-belligerentfashion,” he said.In defense of the invasion his centralpoint was that since the overthrow ofBishop, Grenada has no “legitimateconstituted government.” The interna¬tional treaties, he said, “don’t coverunrecognized governments.” He de¬scribed the Bishop government of ’79-’83 as “questionable in the first place”and expressed confidence that soon“the government of Grenada will be de¬termined by the citizens of Grenada.”In an emotional appeal, Blaut ad-continued on page 14CorrectionIn Tuesday’s article “Students pro¬test US intervention,” a quote was in¬correctly attributed in the last para¬graph to a demonstrator namedMohammed. The paragraph shouldhave read: “A demonstrator namedMohammed said the perceived dangerto US lives in Grenada was ‘a big lie.’Another demonstrator said peopleshould not ‘fawn on somebody just be¬cause they are a senator or a billion¬aire/ ”The Maroon regrets the error.out on nukesVIEWPOINTSFormer energy activist speaksBy Corinne Lally-BenedettoMost of us believe that each individual is entitled,by right, to hold his/her personal opinion on everysubject and situation under the sun. It is a good beliefsince it fosters the spirit of inquiry, the freedom ofdissent and the use of the public forum in the disse¬mination of viewpoints.There is a strong concensus among educated per¬sons that those who desire to present their views inpublic should do so in the most unbiased, well-bal¬anced and well-researched manner that it is possibleto achieve. Sadly, this mature perspective is absentfrom Hilary Till’s assessment of the nuclear in¬dustry (Oct. 21, 1983).As a veteran clean energy activist in this area, Irecognized at once the very words of the industry po¬sition justifying the development of nuclear power.In fact, I had assumed that by now, the public wouldbe familiar enough with the evidence belying thenuke industry’s worn-out claims of providing “safer,cheaper, more efficient power” to prevent an organ¬ized, multi-million dollar advertising campaignfrom legitimizing the first stage of global thermonu¬clear war.A central theme in Till’s article is the nuke in¬ dustry’s contention that conservation would result ina lowering of living standards. Exactly whose livingstandards are being referred to here? Obviously, it iswhite, upper-class American values which are beingheld up as a global standard of living towards whicheveryone else is expected to strive. As per the argu¬ment that we must develop nuclear energy in orderto dish out more foreign aid, I must demand an endto this irresponsible lying on the part of the energycorporations and their slavish proponents. Nevertrust the rich who want to get richer so they can giveto the poor!The nuclear industry wants to develop commercialnuclear power to feed the war machine. This is veryprofitable for the corporate elite and very agreeableto the political elite. If you think that the currentmedia blitz by the nuke industry promoting a benev¬olent and efficient source of energy for America andthe escalation of the Reagan administration’s de¬fense budget are unconnected — think again.The plutonium produced by a commercial nuke isviable bomb material or can be chemically repro¬cessed to produce a fission reaction. Either way thespent reactor fuel poses a grave health and environ¬mental threat and cannot be safely stored anywhere.The battle of not-so-Good versus EvilBy Peter D. BernsteinThe heightening of US-Soviet tensions spirited bysuch recent events as 1) the downing of a Korean air¬liner by Soviet planes 2) the presence of Americanmarines in Lebanon and their resulting casualties 3)the US invasion of Grenada — has produced anotherwave of rhetoric from both Moscow and Washington.The main thrust of these statement has, as always,been to emphasize the basic differences betweenAmerican and Soviet foreign policy goals and meth¬ods. But while differences do exist it is alarming, foran American at least, to note how similar the behav¬ior of the world’s two superpowers has become.One thing has become increasingly clear. Whilethe new administrations may do great lip-servicetoward the concept of avoiding “the unthinkable, theunwinnable” neither President Reagan or PremierAndropov has done much in the way of actually re¬ducing the presence of nuclear and conventionalweapons around the world. This is partly becauseeach uses international tensions for the purpose ofachieving domestic goals. Defense is big business inboth countries and huge defense budgets are asource of money and prestige for military men inany country. Secondly, highlighting internationalissues does much to distract the public from moremundane issues as the economy — a traditionalAchilles’ heel for Soviet administrations and a sorespot for the Reagan camp (over nine percent unem¬ployment and a $20 billion budget deficit). But beyond these common domestic considera¬tions, it is distressing to note how similar are the de¬scriptions of foreign policy goals. Our presence inLebanon as a peace-keeping force is suspicious.First of all, there was little, if any, peace to be kept.Second, the presence of US (pro-Israel, pro-Gemayel) forces is in itself a provocation of themany anti-Israel, anti-Gemayel factions in the Mid¬dle East. If it was not evident before the Beirutbombing, it is now — the marine presence is notviewed as peace-making.Moreover, Reagan himself seems unsure as to thepurpose of the marines in Lebanon. When domesticcritics accused him of making America “policemanof the world,” Reagan quickly responded that wewere not in Lebanon to police the world, but rather toprotect our own interests. But if protection of nation¬al interests is the only necessary criterion for the de¬ployment of militiary force in a region, then we mustaccept as reasonable the Soviet military presence inEastern Europe, Afghanistan, Syria, and Cuba. Arenot these foces also for the purpose of protecting na¬tional interests?Finally we come to the US invasion of Grenada.Originally we were told that it was necessary for theprotection of American citizens on the island. But thestudents are gone and our marines remain now withthe new intention of liberating the people of Grena¬da. A “war of liberation” — where have I heard thatcontinued on page seven There is plenty of documentation of efforts to devel¬op storage in salt beds, in the ocean, in nonshiftinggeological formations, and in abandoned mineshafts. None of these are feasible solutions. Till andthe nuke industry make light of the nuclear wastedisposal problem and call it a “problem of clearingpolitical roadblocks.” Thirty tons of atomic waste isgenerated each year in each reactor with approxi¬mately 5C0 pounds of this in the form of plutonium.Plutonium is so toxic that, theoretically, one poundof it uniformly distributed in the lungs of each personon earth could produce a malignant cancer in all ofus. Dr. Helen Caldicott’s work in this area is espe¬cially germane. There are currently about 80 nukesin operation in the United States with approximatelythe same number under construction. By the year2020, North America will have produced 30,000 tonsof plutonium with nowhere to put it. There is no sureway to contain the waste for the half million years ittakes to lose most of its irradiating power, and pluto¬nium is only one of the many wastes emitted by com¬mercial reactors. For a good overview of the wastedisposal problem I suggest reading any of the nu¬merous works on the subject which are more thanavailable for public consumption. Especially usefulis Nuclear Power, by Walter Patterson, Swords fromPlowshares. by Albert Wohlstetter. Barry Common¬er’s The Closing Circle and Ralph Nader and JohnAbbott on The Menace of Atomic Energy. Dr. HelenCaldicott’s Nuclear Madness presents a detailed ac¬count of the medical effects of radiation exposure tohuman beings.Presently all the spent reactor fuel in the US is intemporary storage in pools of water near the reac¬tors. There are some other “temporary” disposalsites in Illinois, Wisconsin. North Carolina andWashington State. Hilary Till’s liberal use of Con-gressperson Mike McCormack of Washington as acredible source for her information is ludicrous inview of the obvious interest his district has in wastedisposal and research income. Almost half a billiondollars in federal nuclear energy funds find theirway back to McCormack’s district each year.McCormack has consistently championed the nu¬clear industry as a Congressional rep and is thechairperson of the House Subcommittee of AdvancedEnergy Technologies. Hanford, Washington, is thesite of a hugh nuclear research facility which hasbeen the subject of much environmental and occupa¬tional health controversy in the last decade. At leasta half million gallons of high-level radioactive wastehas leaked into the ground at Hanford. This includes115,000 gallons of caustic boiling waste from astorage tank in 1973. In the last three decades Han¬ford’s management has poured 31 million gallons of“low-level” wastes into the soil which contained atleast 190 kg. of plutonium. Plutonium is definitely acontinued on page 14Lebanon war puts Israel in financial straitsBy John EganThe current financial crisis in Israel has been inthe making for several years, and, by all accounts,will continue until a basic alteration of Israeli finan¬cial and political policies is initiated.The Israeli currency is called the shekel. It was in¬troduced in the spring of 1980, to replace the lira. Atthe time of its introduction, the shekel was pegged at3.4 to the US dollar; as of last week the shekel wasfloating at about 80 to the dollar. In the last 4 monthsalone the shekel plummeted from 46 to the dollar tothe present rate.What is the cause of the current crisis? The Israeligovernment has embarked on too many financiallyambitious projects at one time. We need only lock atthe increased militarization of the country, and theextensive settlements in the occupied territories todemonstrate this. Foreign aid from the United Statesand contributions from Jews throughout the worldencouarged Menachem Begin’s second Cabinet topursue policies which a substantial number of Israe¬lis believe are self-destructive. And there is littlechance that Yitzhak Shamir’s government willchange these policies of militarization and annexa¬tion.To be sure, many Jewish students on campus havebeen on the horns of a dilemma throughout the lastyear: how to continue their support for Israel yetmake clear their opposition to the policies of theLikud coalition. The predominant resolution hasbeen to defend what might be called the “idea” ofIsrael, yet to take issue with its government.Indeed this seems to be the general path of theAmerican Jewish community. What compromisesthis stand, of course, is that while this community isprotesting the West Bank settlements and the con¬duct of the war in Lebanon, the checks are still beingsent to organizations whose primary goal is the fi¬nancial support of Israel. So American Jews arehelping to underwrite the policies of Israel while atthe same time vociferiously denouncing those poli-cies.American Jews will say “Without our contribu¬tions Israel will face serious and sustained financialcrises.” Precisely. And that is what the radical wingof the Israeli peace movement has been advocatingfor some time. Gideon Spiro belongs to Yesh G’vul, the Israeli re¬serve soldiers’ organization whose members refuseto serve in Lebanon. In Israel every man betweenthe ages of 21 and 54 is expected to serve 1 month peryear in the military reserve. This is the backbone ofIsrael’s “people’s army.” Yet Gideon Spiro and 2000other Israelis have publicly refused to serve in Le¬banon; they have asked to serve inside pre-1967Israel instead. Some have been accommodated,some have not. To date, roughly 100 Israelis haveserved prison sentences of between two and fourweeks rather than serve in what they see as an ille¬gal and immoral war.Gideon Spiro has recently written:“How can a small state with no natural re¬sources and only 4 million citizens stand suchenormous expenses as the war in Lebanon,which is still costing Israel $1 million per day;how can it support one of the most sophisticat¬ed armies in the world; how can it continue thecostly occupation of the West Bank and Gaza;how can it finance the huge cost of settlements;how can it manage with an inflation rate of 140percent — how can it finance all this and stillprovide its citizens with a reasonable standardof living? The answer is foreign aid. DespiteIsrael’s claims that ‘the whole world is againsther,’ there is no country in the world which re¬ceives such massive quantities of foreign aid asIsrael. (The) total figure of foreign aid to Israelis) between 4 and 5 billion dollars per year.”Of this amount, American governmental aid isroughly 27 billion dollars, in a mixture of loans andgrants; a certain percentage of loans will be treatedas grants by the US, and hence “forgiven,” eachyear. The effect of this massive influx of outside aidto Israel?“The private Israeli citizen does not have tocontribute to his own government’s adven¬tures. In Israel, therefore, it is easy to be achauvinist because it doesn’t cost anything;this is what one might call luxury chauvinism.Only a drastic cut in foreign aid will force theIsraeli citizen to choose what he reallv wants — annexation or a car; settlements or fuel; waror a trip abroad, ” (my emphasis; Israel andPalestine Political Report. September. 1983.)I could not speak to Gideon on my recent trip toIsrael and the West Bank. However, I spoke to someof his colleagues in the various peace groups. HaimBaram said “W’e in the peace camp are determinedto break Begin’s support among American Jews.”Others were less strident, but no one failed to pointcontinued on page 14Lack of discussionBy Veronika KotI suppose we’re all extremely lucky that StudentGovernment was not funding the forum “A Searchfor Solutions: USA/USSR” or it would surely havebeen axed for political bias. (Or would it?) PerhapsI’m wrong, perhaps an apology for Reagan is indeedobjective? With the significant but solitary exceptionof Brzezinski, there was no discussion, no divergenceof opinion. Even speakers who oppose certain pres¬ent policies never voiced these objections: the ques¬tions simply never came up. Everyone agreed! Thequestions from the audience were handled admir¬ably, too. They w ere written down and the moderatorchose the most “interesting” ones. Of course they didlittle to ruffle the contended head-nodding andfriendly chortling that warm the heart and expandthe horizons of the mind. It is a shame that more stu¬dents did not profit from such a harmonious experi¬ence. Many had not even heard about the forum orwere convinced that they had to pay twelve dollarsfor tickets (which were free). It is unfortunate, be¬cause they would have had the opportunity to hearonly about aggression in Grenada and Lebanon)!) Ofcourse we all know the evils that be. And it’s healthyand educational once in a while to spend a day ingrim self-congratulation.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4. 1983 —5— XContacts for Sale!What Is A Bargain?The 4 questions most frequently asked about contact lenses are:1. How Much Are Your Lenses?2. How Much Are Your Lenses?3. How Much Are Your Lenses?4. How Much Are Your Lenses?U/hat is really more important, the lowest price, or the best fittinglenses? We think the 4 questions should be:1. Is the doctor really a contact lens specialist?(or is he an eyeglass salesman?)2. Can I expect professional service and care?(or will I be handled by inept non-professional salespeople?)3. Are the quality of lenses the best available?(or are they off-brands and seconds?)4. The question is, not how much are your lenses, butwill I receive the best care, the best quality and thebest price.We at CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED meet all the above criteriaof CARE, SERVICE, QUALITY AND PRICE.TRY TO BEAT THESE VALUES!• NEW SUPER SOFT HIGH OXYGEN TRANSFER ULTRATHIN • $43.75New super-soft highly oxygen transferrable lenses used to correctthose patients who were previous soft lens failures.• SUPER WET TORIC CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM - $100.00The same remarkable material as the super-wet flexible lenses butspecifically designed to our exact specifications to correct for dif¬ficult astigmatism.• SOFT LENSES CORRECTING FOR ASTIGMATISM (TORIC) - $160.00If you have ever been told that you couldn’t wear soft lens due toastigmatism now you probably can.• EXTENDED WEAR LENSES $160.00The ones you sleep with, no more cleaning, sterilizing nightly, nomore daily Insertation and Removal, wake up in the morning andsee.SUPER-WETFLEXIBLEONLY $29.00Super-thin highly wet-table lens specificallydesigned to correctthose patients whowere previous hardcontact lens failures. BAUSCH & LOMBSOFLENSB3, B4, & F SERIESONLY $33.75Basic series of lensesthat Bausch & Lombbuilt their reputationon.Limit 1 pair per patient.Professional fee additional (required)(includes - Eye Examination, Training. Wearing Instructions and Carrying Case)OUR PROMISE TO YOU:If you aren’t pleased with your lenses after 60 days, cost of the ienses will berefunded. All contact lens fitting done by our Contact Lens Specialists.Dr. S.C. Fostiak and Dr. John S. SchusterWe can replace your lost or broken lenses in 4 hours or less!(if lenses are in stock)IF YOU WANT THE BEST COME TO THE BEST!CONTACT LENSES UNLIMITED2566 N. Clark Si.. Chicago. IL 60614880-54001724 Sherman Ave., Evanaton, IL 60201(above Coantv Seat)864-4441 Student Activities Office PresentsBREAD&POPPETThe Fight AgainstThe End of the WorldCircusThis is a giant pageant, with 16 foot polepuppets, expressing Bread and Puppet’sconcern with the threat of nuclear war. Thepageant is a circus in three parts. Part one isthe presentation of the big World, part two isthe Vision of the End of the World, and partthree is the Fight Against the End of theWorld.SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 133:00 p.m.MONDAY, NOVEMBER 148:00 p.m.MANDEL HALL$4 Students$5 Non-studentsTickets available at the ReynoldsClub Box OfficeFor information call 962-7300NIKE • SAUCONY • BRJJ(WSSWEATSTOPS & BOTTOMSTO DIFFERENT COLORS!HOODEDCREWVESTPANTSHours: M-F. 9:30 - 5:45SAT. 9:30-5:30 WEALSOCARRYX-L0NGPANTSFOR 6'3”&0VERMaster Card, American Express accepted!1527 E. 55th St.(Nest door to University Bank)363-2700ADIDAS • DUOFOLD6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4, 1983mComputer science department comes to UofCBy Hilary TillThe following article on the new com¬puter science department is the last ofa four-part series on computing at theUniversity of Chicago. The article alsobriefly gives information on the newlyformed U of C chapter of the Associa¬tion for Computing Machinery(ACM). -What is the new computer sciencedepartment at the University of Chica¬go? It is “not a post office, and otherthings it is not are a zoo, a Baha’i temp¬le, an unannounced presidential candi¬date, or your Aunt Harriett.” So says asign posted on the door of the computerscience departmental headquarters.It is not the Computation Center; thecomputer science department merelyuses the Center’s facilities. Instead, itis a collection of computer scientists,administrative staff and miscellaneousstudent assistants.This collection of men and womenwere brought together to form a newdepartment, conceived as a result ofthe computer’s social and intellectualimportance, and dedicated to the prop¬osition that computer science can betreated equally with the puresciences.THE DELAYGiven that before this year, the Uni¬versity of Chicago was the only majoruniversity in the country without a de¬partment of computer science, onemay wonder why it took so long for adepartment to be created. There hadbeen a lot of pressure against the for¬mation of the department.One negative pressure was the resultof a misunderstanding of the nature ofcomputer science and its role in a liber¬al arts education. According to StuartKurtz, Assistant Professor in the com¬puter science department, it wasclaimed that “computer science is notan intellectually viable discipline.”For example, some individuals tend¬ed to reduce computer science to allthat one could learn from reading aFortran manual in three weeks. Com¬puter science was generally perceivedin this university as a trade and not asa practicable research discipline. Andany field which is commonly labelledas a “trade” is, of course, not accepted as an appropriate discipline to study atthe University of Chicago.A second significant pressureagainst the formation of the depart¬ment was money. Because the Univer¬sity is running a large deficit, there“just is not a lot of money floatingaround,” Kurtz says. The new com¬puter science department will presentan additional financial burden for theUniversity.RAISON D’ETREIn viewing these two stumblingblocks, one third-year student assert¬ed, “It is amazing that the computerscience department was started.” Butthere were three factors which madethe necessity of a computer science de¬partment evident: increased studentinterest in computers, the maturationof computer science, and the need toattract highly qualified mathematicalgraduate students.Because of changing pressures in so¬ciety and in the work place, studentswho normally would not have takenany computer courses are doing sonow. The number of students enrollingin computer courses at the U of C al¬most doubled from 1981 to 1982. Alongwith an increased enrollment incourses presently offered, there hasbeen a demand “for more advancedand more varied computer courses”than those currently available.There are other “academic and intel¬lectual reasons...for the creation of anew faculty at the University” besidesan increased student interest in com¬puter topics. Computer science hasmatured.One aspect of its maturation is itsemergence “as a discipline in its ownright.” According to Kurtz, fifteenyears ago computer science may nothave been an appropriate discipline forthe University of Chicago, but it istoday. The recent perception of com¬puter science as an “appropriate disci¬pline for the University” is not becauseof fundamental changes in the Univer¬sity, that computer science has be¬come essentially theoretical.The important issues in the sciencetoday, Kurtz says, are not engineeringones, and they are not related to the ac¬tual physical structure of the com¬puter. “Computer science is no longer primarily dedicated to issues like theproper cooling of the Central Process¬ing Unit,” he says.At present, the significant issues incomputer science involve research insuch areas as “artificial intelligence,numerical analysis and algorithmiccomplexity,” to name a few. And toemphasize how theoretical computerscience has become, Kurtz maintainsthat “an academic computer scientistviews the computer more as a theoreti¬cal model than as a physical device.”Besides emerging as a distinct disci¬pline in its own right, computer sciencetouches on a large number of researchdisciplines, some of which are studiedhere. This additional aspect of the mat¬uration of computer science also neces¬sitated the creation of the computerscience department. Computer scienceis essential to such diverse researchdisciplines as cognitive psychology,linguistics, philosophy and statistics.“Computer science is definitely notjust for math majors anymore,” as¬serts Kathryn Kleiman, a second-yearPERL student.A final reason for the department’screation is that the University has lostmany highly qualified mathematicsgraduate students to universities thatdo have computer science depart¬ments. This loss included both poten¬tial students and students who trans¬ferred from the U of C to other schoolsto finish their training.PRESENT ENDEAVORSThe department is currently pursu¬ing many activities.• It is currently attempting to asse¬mble a more diverse faculty. This isone of requirements that has to be ful¬filled before a full fledged graduate de¬partment can be established.• Current faculty members are car¬rying out research in their various spe¬cialties, which include cryptography,complexity of symbolic computations,and the distinguishing features of pro¬gramming languages.• The young department is acquiringnew facilities such as a VAX-750 com¬puter running the UNIX operating sys¬tem. The new facilities will be used forcomputer research.• The department is providing morecourses and more introductory se¬ quences than what was previouslyavailable. It offers three full year se¬quences in programming for credit.The sequences are an introduction toprogramming, theory behind pro¬gramming and theory of computeroperations.GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADU¬ATE DEGREESThose interested in obtaining a de¬gree in computer science at the U of Con either the graduate or undergradu¬ate level will be disappointed. Accord¬ing to the Course Offerings list put outby the department, “Within the nextfew years we plan to establish a gradu¬ate program, and a few years afterthat we will establish an undergradu¬ate major.”But the department will certainly notbe offering degrees until it has assem¬bled a permanent, tenured faculty. Atpresent the department is made up ofsix junior faculty members and tenshort-term senior visitors.There is and has been a “de facto”computer science major on the under¬graduate level. An applied math majorallows room for many electives, likecomputer science courses. Accordingto Dan Breslau, Chairman of the ACM,the computer science courses present¬ly offered as electives can yield a goodbackground in computer science.ACMOne new organization for those inter¬ested in computers is the U of Cchapter of the Association for Comput¬ing Machinery. It is a national organi¬zation for computer science profession¬als and has a membership nationwideof about 50,000. The U of C chapter pre¬sently has about twenty activemembers.Purposes of the chapter are “to helpstudents to develop and expand theirinterests in computer science, to spon¬sor academic activities in the field, andto have a lot of fun,” according to Bres¬lau.The next meeting of the ACM will bein the middle of November. The exactdate will be announced on ComputationCenter system mail. Those who cur¬rently do not use the Center’s facilitiescan contact Dan Breslau at 288-2209 formore information.Peace Corps effortBy Leah SchlesingerAmong the myraid job possibilitiesavailable to the graduating U of C stu¬dent, one which presents an exciting al¬ternative is the Peace Corps. Thoughthe pay may not rival Morgan Guaran¬ty’s, and the flashy pin-striped execu¬tive position is missing, the PeaceCorps has attracted more than 90,000volunteers since President Kennedy in¬itiated the program in the early 1960s.The attraction seems to lie in the lureof foreign lands, exotic experiencesand the romanticism of helping peoplein need.The goals of the Corps, as originallyestablished by Congress, remain un¬changed: to better US relations withdeveloping countries, to help these peo¬ple acquire needed skills and to pro¬vide Americans with the opportunity todiscover other cultures.Good-Evilcontinued from page fivebefore? If in fact we are there to re¬store democracy — which, incidental¬ly, was never much of a tradition inGrenada — why are we not also in suchfriendly nations as South Korea, SouthAfrica, Chile, Honduras, or the Philli-pines to restore democracy? If the pastteaches us anything, it is that Reaganis much more interested in setting up apro-American government in Grenadathan in democracy. Put another way, Ifind it hard to believe that a coup by“right-wing thugs” would have result¬ed in a US military presence for thepurpose of protection of Americanlives and the restoration of democracy.Several Americans have been mur¬dered by pro-government in El Salva¬dor but we have done little to protectAmerican, or for that matter, Salva- Barbara Bochnovic, a U of C historygraduate, joined the Peace Corps afterher graduation. After a three-month in¬tensive training program with an em¬phasis on language and “cross-culturalsensitivity,” she was posted in Ecua¬dor, where she worked for the Ministryof Agriculture, instructing women’sgroups in nutrition and health care.Peace Corps assignments, which lasttwo years each, are usually teachingjobs in math, agriculture, nursing,civil engineering, water sanitation,etc. Volunteers are placed by skill andneed in over 62 countries around theglobe. Although there are a few olderpeople in the Corps, the majority of thevolunteers are recent college gradu¬ates.But Clovia Sloan, a Peace Corps re¬cruiter, emphasized that “contrary tothe opinion held by many people, espe-dorean lives there.It is at this point that I must note thatI am not claiming that US activitiesare worse or even as bad as those of theSoviet Union. But what I do claim isthat if President Reagan wishes to de¬scribe US-USSR relations as good vs.evil, he should not pursue similar ac¬tivities (wars of liberation, military in¬tervention, support of dictatorships) asthat evil spector he is so morally op¬posed to. And if he wishes to continuesuch activities on the grounds of na¬tional interest he should admit thatAmerica is not so virtuous as he wouldhave us believe. And if this is to be thecase, then I suppose we will all have tolive, and perhaps die, with the realiza¬tion that there are no good guys any¬more.Peter D. Bernstein is a second yeardoctoral student in the GraduateSchool of Business. cially older people, these students arenot volunteering because they havenothing better to do. There is a ratherlong screening process. We requireeight references in addition to an inter¬view, and there is a ‘pre-training’ pro¬gram during which more poeple arescreened,” she said. “The Corps is get¬ting to be more and more competitive, and we are getting more highly skilledpeople.”If the idea of being committed tohelping the poor of the world for a fewyears of your life strikes an idealisticcord, Clovia Sloan will be giving inter¬views Tuesday. Appointments for in¬terviews are available in Career andPlacement Services on the second floorof the Revnolds Club.Brzezinski wants medalsBy Veronika KotZbigniew Brzezinski. national securi¬ty advisor during the Carter adminis¬tration, spoke Monday evening at Man-del Hall. As he was leaving heanswered a few questions for report¬ers.Q: You mentioned this idea of “strate¬gically ambiguous equivalence” andyou mentioned “balance sufficient tomaintain the peace”...and you support¬ed the Pershings... Where does the bal¬ance stop?A: The requirements of the balanceare going to be defined to some extentby what the Soviets do. If the Soviets’efforts are maintained on a scale of re¬cent years, we‘11 have to continue doingquite a bit. If they’re scaled down wewon’t.Q: But if there’s a balance rightnow...then once the Pershing IPs andCruise Missiles are deployed thatthrows it off balance...A: No, no, the Pershing II’s are de¬signed to offset the danger to the bal¬ance posed by the SS 20’s.Q: But the SS 20’s are already there.A: That’s why it’s so important to de¬ploy the Pershing II...This is not aquestion of two days or fifteen days.The question is one of trends. Now ob¬viously there is a real danger to thebalance because of the Soviet deploy¬ments that are continuing and there¬fore we’re going to respond by our kindof deployments... Q: On Grenada — You said you sup¬ported the president’s decision to goin...Could you go a little further in yourexplanation?A: I said that I supported the (action)for strategic reasons. Namely that iflands have been taken over by force inthe region then we will have a situationof escalated violence and greater un¬certainty in the region eventually withthe danger of much more massiveAmerican-Soviet confrontation. It wastherefore very important to draw theprinciple immediately that this kind ofconduct is simply unacceptable.Q: Looking at the region of CentralAmerica, the Reagan administrationfor a while had what they called a Cen¬tral American Marshal Plan for theCaribbean and parts of Central Ameri¬ca. Do you think that the United Stateswill sooner or later have to come tosome sort of Marshal Plan for the re¬gion?A: I don’t like the Marshal Plan analo¬gy for the very simple reason that inthe case of Europe the so-called Mar¬shal Plan was used to help the Europe¬ans recover. The social, economic in¬frastructure was there. In the case ofCentral America we’re dealing with amuch more complicated problem: notof helping recovery but of helping de¬velopment from a very low threshold.It’s going to be much more difficult andwill require much more effort.Friday, November 4,1963—7The Chicago MaroonThere’s a lot of Strohbehind a Stroh SignattirejJThis exceptional premium beer is a product of over J200 years of Stroh family brewing experience. . JflOur family began brewing in Kim, Germany in 1773. \Three quarters of a century later. Bernhard Stroh Tintroduced Stroh’s Beer to America. Through the years, \Stroh has come to represent the highest standards of thebrewer’s art.We believe that Stroh Signature is as fine a beer as canbe produced. It contains none but the choicest ingredients,including 100% imported European hops.I personally hope you enjoy it.Chairman1982. Stroh Brewery. Detroit, Michigan»> -Th#* Chirac, .V-.* lNovember 4,1983 • 16th YearMARIE CARDINAL: THE RHYTHM OF WORDSMarie Cardinal is a French writer who, inthe past ten years has received a greatdeal of public recognition throughoutEurope. The Words to Say It is the first ofher ten books to be translated into en-glish.While at the University in mid-October,Ms. Cardinal agreed to do an interviewwith Brian Mulligan, Talvi Laev, and Lor¬raine Kenny. In it she spoke openly abouther writing, her experiences as a womanin France, and her seven years of psy¬choanalysis. The Words to Say It is the ac¬count of a woman, who, much like MarieCardinal, brings herself to a psychoana¬lyst after three years of suffering from analmost continual flow of menstrual blood.There she gains physical and mentalhealth as she discovers and examines herunconscious in the context of her past. Ms.Cardinal's book, and her own story areboth fascinating and inspiring especiallywhen told directly by this outspoken,strong willed woman.GCJ: In the English translation of TheWords to Say It the book is called an “au¬tobiographical novel” which suggests thatthe woman of the book is both you and afictional character. How do you feel aboutthis confusion?MC: I like it very much. That means thatthis character is not really someone in par¬ticular. When an American woman or aJapanese woman or a Swedish womantells me they recognize this woman, theyare the same — they mean that this womanof the book is not only one person, only me.She is a woman who is a little bit like ev¬erybody, like every woman in the world.So this confusion, for me, is sometimes alittle boring. But I believe that it’s boringbecause finally you feel more secure if youbelieve that that happened only to oneperson. Also autobiographical works aregenerally less important than apparentlypurely fictional works. Generally, menprefer to say it’s autobiographical, but forme it’s more. And I hope women are goingto write more and more works where ev¬erything is mixed and you don’t know ifit’s an autobiography, a novel, a poem oran essay. We must mix all that. I believewe are suffering from too many etiquettes(labels) — that’s a novel, that’s an autobio¬graphy, that’s a poem, that’s an essay,that’s history.GCJ: Why do you think men would preferautobiography? So they can think that it’sonly one person — it’s not a generalthing...MC: Yes, first, that’s very important. Andalso because I still believe deeply — butperhaps it’s not as obvious in the States asit is in Latin countries, in Catholic countries— I believe that a good book written by awoman is something boring for men.GCJ: If it’s a creative work, as opposed toautobiography?MC: Yeah... For example, in France there isa weekly list of the bestsellers, a list of theten best novels, and a list of the ten bestdocuments. At the beginning, The Words toSay It was on the list of the novel best¬sellers — 8, 9 or 10, at the end of the list,but it was on the list of novels. And when itbecame a huge success and it moved tofirst place — then they put me on the docu¬ment (non-fiction) list. They say, “Okay,okay, it’s a very good book, everybody’sreading it — but it’s a document, it’s not anovel.” A novel is art. That is still the king¬dom of men. Well, that’s my own interpre¬tation.Perhaps people feel more secure if theysay, “That is the story of a woman, andthat's not mine, and it's autobiographi¬cal.” But there is a problem with that. Myproblem is that I consciously want to mixall the sorts of writing, as I told you, poet¬ry, novel, document, autobiography. Iwrote a book in France after The Words toSay It — it’s not a novel — where I explainthat I want the thing to remain loose,vague, not too precise. I believe we aredying of precise things. Nothing is precisein the creation, in the world, in the cosmos.The more we go on, the more we knowthat. Einstein, he wanted to find harmoni¬ous organization in the world. He had thiscultural thing in his head, and he wantedto demonstrate that there was a certain harmony in the Universe, just as we Occi¬dentals define harmony in music. But hecouldn’t do that. And after him the new sci¬entific research proved, on the contrary,that it was not harmony, as we think of itthat organizes the world.I believe that The Words to Say It is notonly autobiographical, but it is completelyfiction for some pages, it’s poetry a little,and it’s also a document. That’s new and Ibelieve that makes the book successful allover the world, not only in France, but inScandinavia, Germany, Italy, England,Japan, and Moslem countries... Why thatwell? Because everybody can find whatthey want in the book. If you want a novel,it’s a novel, if you want poetry, it’s poet¬ry, if you want a document, it’s a docu¬ment...GCJ: That may be part of its success, butthere must be something more in the con¬tent of the writing that touches people.MC: Yes — but they are unable to under¬stand that. Few people know what writingis. The millions and millions of people whohave read the book don't even see thatthere is writing in it — they just see a his¬tory of some woman. That I know becauseof the movie adaptation of the book. Theproducers thought that it would be verysimple to make a movie out of the book —but in fact we worked five years on thescript. Because at the beginning theywanted to tell the story — and there is nostory. It comes with the words, by the writ¬ing, more than by the story itself. So wehad to find with the camera somethingthat I found with my pen.GCJ: How closely were you involved in theadaptation of the book to a film?MC: Eventually I had to get involved. Butat first when I saw what they were doing Itold them, "I don’t have the right to tellyou not to do that, and you can keep thetitle — but I don’t want my name on theposters in the street.” They said, “No, wewant your name” — and besides theywere afraid that I would tell the newspa¬pers, radio, and T.V., that this film, for me,was pure shit. So finally they asked me towork on the script, with the director andanother friend of mine, a woman. We didsomething that I believe is very inter¬esting. But, to comp back to our subject,they only wanted to translate the story.There is no story. This woman has no name.They called her Marie for the movie, butshe has no name, in the book. She is no¬body. And nothing happens, except smallthings which come with the words, with thewriting, the rhythm, and the reflection —but not with something you can show.GCJ: How did you solve that problem?MC: We did the same thing. We tried toshow with the camera what I did when Iwas writing. To find a certain rhythm, acertain light, a certain atmosphere, whichtells much more than events. That is to say,you can see somebody in a certain light, ina certain atmosphere, not even speakingvery much, and only moving a little, and ifthe atmosphere is strong enough, if thelight says exactly what we want to say —that can be happiness, sadness, or fear forexample — if you find that with therhythm of the images and the lights andyou create certain atmosphere, you willhave the same thing in film that I found inwriting. And we did that.GCJ: How do you feel about the idea oftranslating words — a novel — into images— a film? Do you think a film will reach theaudience in a different way?MC: I love movies. For me, it’s an intoxicat¬ing medium — much more so than litera¬ture. Literature is not the medium whichtouched me the most. I prefer paintingfirst, and after that film, after that writ¬ing.GCJ: You came to writing fairly late...MC: Yes, very late, I was almost 30 yearsold.GCJ: Why, if these other arts touched youmore, did you not pick up a paintbrush andstart painting? Why did you choose towrite?MC: I believed that I could hide... It's easyto hide something you write. I was soashamed of myself that I was unable topaint. I would have had to learn. I hate un¬professional people — so I would have hadto buy the right pencils...but I didn't know Marie Cardinalanything. But writing I knew already. Icome from the university — I had a bigbunch of words, a big bunch of culture, ofknowing my grammar very well. That wasa very easy tool for me. Painting wouldhave meant trying to find things to paint.And, afterwards, to try to do good things.Well, one of my daughters draws verywell, and I knew how hard she worked onthat, for years and years. So I knew verywell that I couldn’t begin by doing littlestupid things. Writing was something veryclose to me, very handy. And I could hide itvery easily.GCJ: Did it also come from the psychoan¬alysis?MC: It came the first year of the analysis. Ihad never tried to write before... I wantedto be cured. I believed that perhaps itwould happen faster if I wrote down ev¬erything that was passing through myhead... I wrote three novels and one essaywhile I was in analysis. But at that time mynovels were apparently not at all autobio¬graphical. They were ‘real novels' (sarcas¬tic laugh) — what is called real novels. Ex¬cept I know, because of that, that you aremuch more autobiographical when youhide yourself behind characters than whenyou write in the first person. Because fi¬nally when you write your fantasies youare much more immodest and indecent andmuch more in your private life than whenyou write something else. But it’ssafer...that’s not me, that’s somethingelse. It’s always dangerous to write in thefirst person, because you can be hurt. Per¬haps this is why it was only when my anal¬ysis was finished that I began to write inthe first person. But really I was alwayswriting in the first person — so I wrote — Idon’t know how many autobiographies,(laughs)GCJ: Have you reread the early novels?MC: I prefer them to the others, but theyare small. My mother was still alive, so Ibelieve that I didn’t dare write everythingat that moment, and perhaps I wasn’t freefor other reasons also. But I like them.They are my children. You must like yourbooks when you are a writer. I know howthey are — they are small, they are tiny,but I like them. One of them is now beingmade into a film for French T.V., and I’mpleased with that.GCJ: When you see your books in transla¬tion, do they feel like your books, or isthere a distance put there, because of thedifference in the language?MC: Yes, I still feel they are my books... GCJ: Well, I was really surprised when Iheard that the last chapter in the book hadbeen left out of the English translation.And I was wondering how you felt aboutthings like that.MC: It was more than the last sentence, itwas the last chapter. It was a chapter ofone sentence. It said: “And a few monthslater it was May 1968.”But, after all, when it’s said that forAmericans it’s not interesting, or for Japa¬nese, or for Swedish that doesn’t meananything — but I must say that this is thefirst time such a thing has been done. It’sby Pat (Goodheart, the translator). But forPat it became her book — she feels likethat. I don’t feel like that at all. Finally,she's a little strange and she believes shehas rights to this book.GCJ: What kind of agreement is made be¬tween translator and writer? Is there ageneral practice?MC: No agreement at all. She is a publish¬er, and a translator — so she decided totranslate the book. Another older Ameri¬can man did the first translation, whichwas very correct grammatically, but with¬out any poetry or rhythm. So she tookthat, probably — she says no, but I’m sureyes, because she doesn't speak French thatwell. She took that word-by-word transla¬tion — mot-a-mot — and, after she workedon that as a writer, she succeeded in ad¬ding the rhythm of the book and the poeticpassages. That’s good, the rhythm is good.But I prefer when I don’t understand thelanguage so I can’t judge, and it’s over.From time to time other things have beenleft out, but I don’t feel they are as impor¬tant as the last sentence. But I have expe¬rienced the same thing in France about thislast chapter, with my publisher. He askedme if I thought it necessary to keep thatlast chapter. In the first French edition ofThe Words to Say It, there are no chapters.They put chapters in the pocket book. I justdiscovered that — they didn’t ask., me.They had problems with the last chapter,too.:.GCJ: What do you think their problemswith it were?MC: You know, May 1968 was really some¬thing for the French. And tor some it’s abig thing, and for others it doesn’t meananything. For me, the sentence at the endof the novel is important. Because May1968 was big, was huge — was for thewords, for the expression. For two monthsit was a kind of paradise for humankind. Itcontinued on pago 10DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOC FILMS • DOCFRIDAY: SATURDAY SUNDAY.Inhn Sanloc’ Alan Pakula’s Hans Jurgen-SyberbergLUDWIG, REQUIEMFRIDA Y: M lJohn Sayles’ AlBABY IT'S YOU SCWith Rosanna Arquette and WiVincent Spano 'at 7:30 and 9:45 (AcAll Shows in Cobb Hall, 5811 S* Ellis -SOPHIE CHOICEWith Meryl Streep and Kevin Klineat 7 and 10(Additional Show Sunday at 2 p.m.-$2.50) FOR A VIRGIN KINGat 8 p.m.Admission $2 ($150 Friday & Saturday) - 962-8574Sticks & StuffCOLLECTIBLES • ANTIQUES • USED FURNITURE •CLOCKS • LAMPS • DOLLS • JEWELRY • STAINED GLASSMINIATURE LAMPS • STAINED GLASS BUSINESS CARD HOLDERSI 7 16 F. 55t»i St. Hours:Tues-Fri Noon - 7 pmSat & Sun 10 am - 5 pm 667-1610EUROPEAN GOURMET SHOP• PASTRIES • PATES • TRUFFLES •• GOURMET CHEESES & SPECIALTY MEATS• IMPORTED TEAS & COFFEES• FRESH CROISSANTS AND BREADS• ETHNIC SPICES & HERBS• FRESH PASTAS• FINE IMPORTED CHOCOLATES• GOURMET FOODS CAFE & CARRY OUTSOPEN 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. daily, 9 a.m. to5 p.m. Saturday and Sundayin Windermere House • 1642 East 56th StreetAs part of the nationwide “Week of Education”,the Peace and Justice Commission of CatholicTheological Union and the Chicago Area Facul¬ty for a Freeze are sponsoring a symposiumWORKING FOR EAST-WEST UNDERSTANDINGfeaturingJAMES CRACRAFTProfessor of History, University of Illinois atChicago Fellow, Russian Research Center,Harvard Univesity Editor, “The Soviet UnionToday: An Interpretive Guide” withrespondentsJAMES WILLDirector, Peace and Justice Center, Garrett-Evangelical Theological SeminaryARNOLD JACOB WOLFRabbi, Congregation KAM Isaiah IsraelDIANE BERGANTProfessor of Old Testament, CatholicTheological UnionMonday, November 7 at 7:30 PMUnited Church of Hyde Park 1443 E. 53rdAlso on November 10 at 2:20 PM,LOOP COLLEGE. A forum bet¬ween the Democratic Senatorialcandidates Roland Burris, PhilipRock and Paul Simon. THE NEW ARMS RACE ?AWeekofEducation SG ACTIVITIES presentsMikeConte&TONITE!!Ida Noyes Theater9pm-midnit eFREEfunded bySGFC.si* With theS HOLIDAYSEASONScoming don’t get stuckwithout 3M Tape and other3M Products.This month get a 3MPOST-IT-NOTE TRAYFREE with the purchase of24 EA #654 or # 655POST-IT-NOTES.Free note trayGet a C-45 Post ft Note Tray FREE when youbuy 24 3‘x 5* Post it Note Pads(De* NT SBi Of 24 3’* 3’ Pads(Oeaf NT-4B) rt the speoaiymarked deal boxesFREE TRAY OFFERWHILE QUANTITIESLAST!The University of Chicago BookstoreStationery DepartmentSecond floor-970 E. 58th Street962-8729 or I.B.X. 5-4103VISA* I MasterCardy2—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALTHEATERTh# Rise and Fall of Mahagony: I have afeeling that this revival of the Ber¬tolt Brecht play by the Remains The¬ater Company will have as much todo with our generation as the gener¬ation that it was written in. Theyhave decided to update it using orig¬inal music written by the cast,though I have feeling they will hard¬ly be Kurt Weil. Still, any Brechtplay is worth seeing especially if it isperformed by a good experimentalgroup like the Remains Theater.They are already smart enough torealize that it does need updatingand that this updating isn’t opposedto the notions of Brechtian theater.Crosscurrents Cabaret, 3204 N wil-ton. 472-7884. Thurs and Fri at 7:30,Sat and Sun at 7. $8 and $10. —SODiagonal Man: Theory and Practice. TheBread and Puppet Theater, a multi-media performance troupe, has fi¬nally decided to bring one of its in-dredible shows to Chicago. Theyhave been around since the 60’spresenting the best in experimentaldrama. This one is their newestwork, and though I'm not surewhether they will continue to havethe energy and vitality that theyhad before, it will definitely beworth seeing for the historical valuealone. Or as the Reader said, “gosee it or be square”. Note: TheBread and Puppet theater will beperforming a pageant event in Man-del Hall which shouldn’t be confusedwith the new production down at theGoodman. While this too is probablyworth seeing, the item at the Good¬man is the bona fide item anddoesn’t use any students from theSchool of the Art Institute. Ask IreneConley of Student Activities why wecouldn’t get the real item. GoodmanTheater 200 S Columbus Ave.443-3800. Tue thru Thurs at 7:30, Frithru Sun at 8. Alternating Sat andSun Matinees at 2:30. $12 but 50tickets will be held until the day ofperformance when they will be soldfor $5: yes, public theater has cometo Chicago. — SOHay Fever This delight is written byNoel Coward and directed by SusanDafoe. British drawing room comedyat its very best. The humor tran¬scends both class and culture bias.Very well done, eat it up. Wed thruSat at 8, Sun 2:30 and 7:30. CourtTheatre, 5535 S Ellis. 753-4472.$10-13, $2 student discount. — JHIn 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. Huran743-6442. $11-13.The Warden of the Tomb and SexualPerversity in Chicago, by FranzKafka and David Mamet, respec¬tively; presented by Concrete GothicTheater. See review in this issue.Third Floor Reynolds Club Theater.363-5185. Fri, Sat and Sun at 8. $3,$2 U of C students.MUSICChamber Music Series Tonight is thefirst concert featuring the VermeerString Quartet with oboist Ray Stillof the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.$9; UC students, $6; available onehour before the concert at the Reyn¬olds Club Box Office. 8:00 MandelHall.University of Chicago Collegium Musi-cum Concert. Directed by MarySpringfels the group will performvocal and instrumental music of 13thcentury England and France; byPierre de la Croix, Jehan Lescuriel,Adam de la Halle and others. Nov. 5at 8:00 p.m. in Bond Chapel. Free.University Chamber Orchestra will pres¬ent its first concert of the year thisweekend. Conducted by Elaine ScottBanks, the orchestra will performworks of Haydn, Corelli, Mozart,and C.P E Bach. Sun, Nov 6 at 8:00p.m. in Goodspeed Recital hall.Free.Noontime Concert Series This concertwill feature works by composerJames Allen. Thur, Nov 10 at 12:15in Goodspeed Recital Hall. Free.Gene Pitney: GCJ contest #1: write yourown blurb. Park West, 322 W Armi-tage. 929-5959. Fri Nov 4Chicago Lyric Opera: Some bitchin' eve¬nings at the Opera—La Cenerentolaon Fri Nov 4 and Tue Nov 8; Der Flie-gende Hollander on Wed Nov 9, CivicOpera House, 332-2244.Vemeer String Quartet with guest artistRay Still, principal oboist of the CSO.Mandel Hall. 962-8068. Fri Nov 4 at8.The Lake Shore Symphony Orchestra:Steven Larson, Musical Director,presents a program of Rameau, Rimsky-Korsakov, and Brahms. SatNov 5 at 8, Mather High School,728-5807. $6; $3 students.Dukes of Dixieland: One of the oldestand best-known dixieland bands ap¬pears on Sun Nov 6 at 3 at the Audi¬torium Threatre, 70 E CongressPkwy. 922-2110. $4-$15.The Reicha Woodwind Quartet: A pro¬gram of S. Barber, B. Britten, G.Flynn, J. Harbison, A. Hova Hovha-ness, and W. Smith. Sun Nov 6 at 8,Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 SWoodlawn. $5: $2 students.The Band: Well, if the Gang of Four wasfive years too late, that makes TheBand about 15 years too late. But. ifnostalgia is your primary musical in¬terest, you might enjoy this concertwhich promises to reunite all theoriginal members of The Band, withthe exception of Robbie Robertson.I’d rather listen to my ABC album.Still, if you’re interested andhaven't yet purchased your tickets,check for ticket availability beforeyou go. Mandel Hall. 962-8068. SunNov 6 at 8. — BKUniversity Chamber Orchestra: Conduc¬tor Elaine Scott Banks presents aprogram of Haydn, Corelli, Mozart,and C.P.E. Bach. Goodspeed RecitalHall. Sun Nov 6 at 8. Free.Men Without Hats: Dancing shouldn’t besafe. Tue Nov 8 at 7:30 at the ParkWest, 322 W Armitage. 929-5959.Tue Nov 8 at 7:30. —BKHuey Lewis and the News: A San Franci¬sco bar band hits the big time, butthe quality remains the same. ParkWest, 322 W Armitage. 929-5959.Wed Nov 9 at 8.Noontime Concert: Norman Binge,trumpet and Christopher Coleman,trombone with Tony Barrett and JayRosenblatt, pianos in a program ofHonnegger, Schmidt, and Coleman.Goodspeed Recital Hall. Free. ThurNov 3 at 12:15.MISCGordimer Films Seven stories by thehighly-acclaimed anti-apartheidSouth African writer have beenmade into films by German televi¬sion. They will be shown in groups ontwo different days; after the firstshow on Nov 9, South African poetDennis Brutus will appear to discussthe importance of Gordimer’s work.Call 443-3733 for more information:The theater of the School of the ArtInstitute, Columbus Drive at JacksonBoulevard. Sat, Nov 5 at 2 and 4:45;Wed Nov 9 at 5:30 and 8:15. $3, $4for both programs in one day.The Peace Museum If you are con¬cerned about hunger, social justice,militarism, racism, and nuclear war,you will enjoy the Peace Museum.The current exhibit, “Give Peace aChance", focuses on the role of musicas a force for social change. Pic¬tures, sheet music, concert posters,letters, and records of importantpeace activist-musicians (WoodyGuthrie, Bob Dylan, Holly Near, TheClash, Bob Marley, and Phil Ochs, to name a few) are on display. There isalso interesting nostalgia fromvarious benefit concerts — Wood-stock, the Concert for the People ofKampuchea and Bangladesh, andthe June 12 disarmament concert.After thinking about Lebanon, Cen¬tral America, Grenada, and nuclearweapons all week, the Peace Muse¬um was a wonderful dose of inspira¬tion. I came out of there invigoratedand confident that, “We shall over¬come, some day.” Show runs untilJan 31 1984. Peace Museum, 341 WSuperior. $2.50. —DSJane Addams Center celebrates its20th anniversary with an openhouse tomorrow from noon to 3.3212 N. Broadway. 549-1631. Free.Party at Crosscurrents, Wilton atBelmont, at 6; $10.FILMGiant (George Stevens, 1956) Long,sprawling, and magnificent. RockHudson's first (and perhaps last)credible performance. With Liz Tay¬lor, James Dean, and more thanenough Texas for a lifetime. A limit¬ed, campus re-release. Fri., Nov. 4 &Sun.. Nov. 6 at 8:30 LSF. $2 - PFBaby, It’s You (John Sayles, 1983) JohnSayles (Secaucus Seven, Lianna)broke into the big, big time with thistrashy, hip, funny, and sensitivefilm. Baby, It’s You is the story of Jill(Rosanna Arquette), a nice Jewishhigh school girl, and her wrong-side-of-the-tracks romance with “theSheik,” a handsome Italian workingclass kid whose nickname does notcome from his crypto-Arab goodlooks. The film follows their affairfrom prom nights to college days, astime (and Sayles’s camera) revealthe problems of class and the transi¬tory nature of romance. With goodperformances, a great style, and atender heart, Baby, It's You offers akeenly observed and clear-eyedlook at first love in the fabulous Six¬ties. Fri, Nov 4 at 7:30 & 9:45. DOC.$2.50. - MKWest Side Story (Robert Wise & JeromeRobbins, 1961) Looks 10, Dance 3.The Montagues and Capulets invadeNew York. With Natalie Wood, Rich¬ard Beymer, George Chakiris, RitaMoreno, and songs by Bernstein &Sondheim. Only in America ... Sat .Nov. 5 at 6:45 & 9:45 LSF $2 - PFSophie’s Choice (Alan Pakula, 1982) Itstars Meryl Streep, so you’ll love it.Compared to Harold and Maude,however, this movie is. . well. . . I'mnot sure anything can be comparedto Harold and Maude. But Sophie'sChoice is about love between awoman and a boy. It’s also aboutHitler, concentration camps, andMeryl’s Academy-Award winningstyle. This touching story of a beau¬tiful, guilt-haunted, Polish-Catholicsurvivor of the death camps alsostars Kevin (The Big Chill) Kline as apost-war party animal. Peter Mac-Nichol plays a pre-Police-era ladnamed “Stingo” whose involvementwith Sophie/Meryl is a perfect cine¬matic evocation of the Synchonicitylyric, “Every girl that I go out withbecomes my mother in the end.” Sat,Nov 5 at 7:00 & 10:00; Sun Nov 6 at2:00 pm. DOC. $2.50. - JMLudwig, Requiem for a Virgin King (Hans-Jurgen Syberberg, 1972) In comme¬moration of the 100th anniversaryof the death of Richard Wagner, DOCFilms will be presenting a series offilms dealing with the life and workof the wizard of Bayreuth. Ludwig,an early film from the controversialdirector of Our Hitler, is a kaleido¬ scopic outpouring of words andimages inspired by the life of Ba¬varia's “Mad King,” Ludwig II, thetroubled, neurotic, homosexual mon¬arch whose financial assistance gaveWagner his artistic ticket to ride.Dream-like, eccentric, and expres¬sive, Syberberg’s Ludwig both cele¬brates and parodies the romanticethos of the time. DOC is presentingthis film along with the Goethe Insti¬tute and the Film Center of the ArtInstitute; for more info on non-DOCfilms, call the Goethe Institute at329-0915. Sun, Nov 6 at 8:00. DOC.$2. — MKHeaven Knows. Mr. Allison (John Hus¬ton, 1957) John “Maltese Falcon”Huston gives the Robert Mitchumpersona an interesting twist in thiswonderfully silly story of a ruggedU.S. Marine (guess who) and a gentleRoman Catholic nun (Deborah Kerr)who are marooned together on asmall Pacific island during WW II.Huston's penchant for the bizarreturns this updating of Robinson Cru¬soe into something this side of Civili¬zation and its Discontents, as Mit¬chum and Kerr sublimate theirsexual tensions into a hilarious planto defeat the island's Japanesetroops. Heaven Knows, Mr. Allisonallows Mitchum to display his flairfor comedy, usually seen in his ownpenchant for slugging photogra¬phers. Mon, Nov 7 at 8:00. DOC $2.- JMARTFans An incredible show. Its strengthis not its theme, but the manner inwhich this has combined with a pleth¬ora of media, techniques, and styles.The invited artists have attainedvarious degrees of recognition, lo¬cally, nationally, and international¬ly; but all have also attained a levelof facility or accomplishment that,while also various, is quite high. It isthis general accomplishment thatamazes: seldom does a large groupshow offer consistently high quality.This one does, in spite of its appar¬ent diversity.Or maybe because of. The invitedartists are also cognizant of theCenter's importance, or theywouldn’t have gone to the trouble ofproducing a piece specifically forthis show. This was a benefit andwas a financial success for theCenter, which would please by itselfanyway. But this fact testifies to thestrength of collecting: the manifestfact, the exhibit, testities to thestrength and diversity of the con¬temporary local practice, which ofcourse the Center has fostered. All inall a success, made incomplete onlyby the hierarchy implicit in themounting. Don’t miss it — it closes to¬morrow at the Hyde Park ArtCenter, 1701 E 53rd 11-5.324-5520. Free - DMNew 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. Free.John Knight Museotypes A writer inthe October 26 Herald observed: "Itis interesting to note that, overall,there is a more modern, uncluttereddesign to the American museums.”That “interesting” is not interestingbut essential: the insight does notcompel; it’s more on the level ofamusement. The specialist by con¬trast might be amused by Knight'splates, but surely would make nosuch observation. This differencepoints up the problem with the show: those unprepared to encounter theshow on its own terms remain at thelevel of appearance and miss theconcept; those prepared skip the ap¬pearance. which is quaint, and findthemselves thinking it, which is tosay thinking things they've most li¬kely already thought. For theformer group the visuals don’t makeit; for the latter the thoughts don’t.See the plates think your ownthoughts. Thru Nov 19 at the Renais¬sance Society, fourth floor Cobb.5811 Ellis. Tue-Sat. 10-4; Sun, 12-4962-8670. Free —DM/JHClaudia Traudt Damned Songs Newdrawings, paintings, writings, andphotographs by a lover of life ThruNov 19 at the Younger Gallery,1428 E 53rd. Mon-Fri, 12-9: Sat,10-6; Sun, 12-6. 752-2020. Free"Power Places” These color photo¬graphs by John Pfahl are an exten¬sion of the age-old American themeof the machine in the garden.’ Pfahlplays on this particular manifesta¬tion of the modern Western belief ina nature/culture dichotomy: the no¬tion of the ’intrusion’ of industry intothe wilderness. But this specific cul¬tural construction of the dichotomyhas in the past been ideologically re¬conciled by a version of pastoralism,in which efficent mechanics are con¬sidered a proper — even delightful— characteristic of a well-orderednature. Pfahl’s representations ofnuclear power plants and genera¬tors do not simply comment on theirony of setting industrial — dirty,alienating, man-made, in a word ‘un¬natural’ — machines in the land¬scape of pristine, healthy, God-given ‘nature’. They indicate andexplore the ways in which humanperception can work to accommo¬date what are initially considered tobe discrepancies and are thus fright¬ening — and transform them into asingle, comprehensible, ordered,harmonious — and thus safe and ac¬ceptable — whole. The philosophy ofpastoralism which in the 18th centu¬ry represented the well-fendedlandscape as the perfect middle be¬tween the jungle of wilderness to thewest and the alienation of the Euro¬pean urban setting to the east, isshown by Pfahl to be capable of tak¬ing on characteristics of the nuclearage in the 20th. God’s harmony isno longer expressed through flow¬ing fields of wheat bordered bywhite fences with haystacks evenlyplaced in the distance, but in theway each power plant’s particularconstruction blends into its particu¬lar setting Shapes of shadows re¬flect shapes of buildings; trees andsmoke spiral upwards in a singlemovement; tall palms grow parallelto tall chimneys; the formalism ofthe dry land, the mountains, and thesky in the distance is in balance withthe formalism of two machinesplaced within that distance; lines ina rock base, grass above, and over¬hanging cables all extend from eachother.In some photos, the use of distanceand perspective have allowed ‘na¬ture’ to be bigger*than ‘culture’; toour eye, the culture still stands out.The question of which is stronger ispartially answered by the state¬ment that the two work together.Perhaps the most powerful expres¬sion of this is the depicltion of theRancho Seco Nuclear Power Plant,Sacramento County, California atsunset. The sky is flooded with color— "isn’t it beautiful?” — but the sunis precisely behind the buildings atcontinued on pege 4Grey City Journal 11/4/83Staff: Steven Diamond, Pat Finegan, Joel Ginsberg, Jonathan Katz, Jae-Ha Kim, Bruce King, Lorraine Kenny, Michael Kotze, Madeline Levin,Rainer Mack, Jeffrey Makos, Nadine McGann, Vince Michael, DavidMiller, John Probes, Dan Sakura, Cassandra Smithies, David Sullivan,Christopher Wells. Ken WissokerProduction: Nadine McGann, David Miller, Abigail Asher, Brian Mulli¬gan, Jesse HalvorsenAssociate Editors: Abigail Asher, Stephanie BaconEditors: Jesse Halvorsen, Brian MulliganTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983—3What weights lifted give strengthv_.. 'imaam7WT:>tyYou held |Wf'^for a moment'• 'one concretealternativeto leather jacket coolwMgmsmcoolAnd then,fearful and uneasystrode offto improveyour body.weightsstrengthand are youstrongerthan thatsad-eyed, muscular fool■ .V S' * ■ ■!■ ,7 f-• *$.;$»/*•* *•:,:**.—Cassandra Smithies PERVERSITY ONby Stephanie BaconTwo plays that would seem to be ex¬ceedingly strange bedfellows — The War¬den Of The Tomb by Franz Kafka and Sex¬ual Perversity In Chicago by David Mamet— are being presented together thisweekend by Concrete Gothic Theater. Thecombination is strangely satisfying.The first piece, The Warden Of The Tombis fragmentary, a small part of a largerwork that was never completed. As onewould expect, it lacks resolution becauseof this, but is intriguing nonetheless. Thestory concerns a young prince and hiscourt, but the focus of this fragment is thewarden, a strange, stunted old man in theservice of the prince. He has been occupiedfor thirty years in the ceremonial guard¬ing of the royal family tomb, but he hasbeen of late consumed by visions of thedead inhabitants of the tomb struggling toescape its gates by night.In the role of the warden, Concrete Goth¬ic presents us with a performance by veryimpressive caliber by Mike Bael. He isplausible, frightening and obsessive as hewrithes his maniacal way through agraphic description of his nightly strugglewith the Duke, a long dead ancestor of thePrince. To what degree the warden'sstruggle is real or imagined is never ex¬plained. adding to the tension of the scen¬ario. Here the direction of David Kiefermust be credited, for he guides Baelthrough many long and difficult passageswith conviction and skill.Unfortunately, this same strength of di¬rection is often lacking in the prince,played by Kevin Irlen. His interpretationof the character is unclear and so the char¬acter's motives are obscure.The other characters of the piece arestriking but peripheral, and ail quite ade¬ quately played. Each courtier or servantsuggests another sinister entity, anddirector Kiefer orchestrates these ele¬ments into a whole of oppressive andmemorable tone. Also quite noteworthyare the costumes, which suggest someunreal time of the past without any bur¬densome specifity. The lighting, too, isespecially effective in achieving this end.The second piece, Sexual Perversity InChicago, does not fail to match the highstandard of production that the first piecesets. The script consists of a series of vi¬gnettes among four comtemporary charac¬ters. on the subject of their respectivesex/love lives. The play does not reallyconcern perversity, but rather sex and theproblems that arise from contemporarysexual attitudes and conventions. Thecharacters are steeped in their own partic¬ular hang-ups, which provides for muchamusing interaction, but also unfortunate¬ly limits the depth of the characters.In all fairness, all four actors in SexualPerversity work admirably with the mate¬rial. Stuart Feffer as Bernie, the youngurban businessman on the make, is funnyand plausible, and above all crude. Dan¬nie, Bernie’s slightly more sensitive friendand business partner, is played with realempathy and wit by Joe Scroppo. The fe¬male characters, who are decidely less em¬phasized and developed in the play, aresubtle and intelligent in their interpreta¬tions. Diana Watson as Joan Webber, asingle and lonely grade school teacher, isan appropriately frustrated and frustrat¬ing character. Her lost and confused room¬mate, Deborah, is played with an easygrace by Meg Schellenberg.The problems with these characterscome not from the actors or from thesturdy direction, but rather from thescript itself. The way the characters arewritten is rather flat and stereotypical, and none seem able to transcend the be¬haviors of their types. The character ofDannie is the only character that is al¬lowed to learn from the events of the play;no one else changes, and so characteriza¬tions which are initially quite amusing riskbecoming tiresome by the end of the eve¬ning. A deeper concern is the way in whichthis play deals with a basic issue of sex¬ism, or rather, the way in which it fails todeal with the issue adequately.Dannie, and much more so Bernie, blametheir frustration on women. Mamet sub¬jects us to multiple tirades on the oddnessof women, the bodies of women, the gall ofwomen, the intrinsically capricious andvain natures of women, ad infinitum. Al¬though it is perfectly valid for Mamet toraise the issue of men’s resentment ofwomen, he does not explore or resolvethis issue. He implicates the women in theplay for the problems that arise; and ul¬timately, he does disservice to his femalecharacters and risks alienating his femaleaudience.This problem is compounded by the di¬rection of the character of Deborah. Sheseems irrational, moody and cruelly fickleat the end of her relationship with thecharacter Dannie, who is made out to bethe innocent victim of her willfulness. Hadthe character been directed to be a bitmore rational and self-possessed, the situ¬ation would have lent a greater insightinto the pain and vulnerability of thesepeople.The rewards of this play are not in itsinsights, but in its humor. The production,being breezy and competent, makes themost of this element, especially in its useof the bright and talented Stuart Feffer.Although both plays leave us with ques¬tions, their polished production and vi¬brant contrast of mood make them wellworth seeing.Alfred Stfeglftz, Wlnttr. Fifth Avanua M3. 4r?FRIDAYrNq /EiyiBEn _4 .198: -THE grey city journal continued from page 3the end of the semi-desert plain, sothat it is not visible within the cam¬era frame. The image is almost theconventional post card photo — butwith a catch. The beauteous raysseem to emmanate from the plant it¬self, whose halo of light extends agolden blessing far into the sky andclouds, and over the earth.What at first seems intelligentirony, at second glance has some¬thing more subtle to say. The brico-lage at work here, which draws to¬gether the boundaries between‘nature’ and ‘culture’, is buying asafety of comprehension at a cost ofunderstanding. ‘Power’ is displacedas it is put within the greater cultur¬al system; as wilderness and in¬dustry, God and ‘man’, natural lifeand nuclear energy are brought to¬gether, the ideological and materialreality of power — where it comesfrom and who it affects — is not onlyavoided, but lost in the constructionof harmony.Also: “How One Town Is Saying NoTo The Bomb”; black and white por¬traits, with accompanying texts, ofleaders of the Ashland, Oregon Nu¬clear Free Zone Movement. An at¬tempt at documentary, in which theintent seems to be to display thebroad, popular base which is bothpossible and effective in the anti¬nuke movement. People from dis¬parate occupations are represented.I found myself reading the writtentexts more than the photographs;even these are of questionable in¬terest There is at least one momentof humor, however: activist Char¬lotte (“Wis”) Nelson, seated beneatha tree with her legs crossed in classic‘Om style, says brightly, “there arealternative ways to ‘radiate’.’’ Up¬stairs' black and white photographsby Elliott Erwitt. Thru Dec 2 at Co¬lumbia College, 600 S Michigan.Mon-Fri, 10-5; Sat, 12-5. 663-1600.Free. —NMAlfred Stieglitz History of Modernism,Chapter 5: Photography gets on theBandwagon. Somebody said “Heylookit, why if it's an art does it try tolook like painting?'' Then it got crispfor a while before it went’ abstract.Thru Jan 3 at the Art Institute, Mi¬chigan at Adams. Mon-Wed, Fri,10:30-4:30, Thur, 10.30-8; Sat, 10-5;Sun, 12-5. 443-3500. Admission dis¬cretionary except Thur, freeFrench Photography Two shows, one ofParis by a number of artists; theother of pictures by postwar photo¬journalist Jean-Philippe Charbon-nier. Opens tomorrow at the CulturalCenter, 78 E Washington. Thru Dec 30: Mon-Thur, 9-7, Fri, 9-6; Sat. 9-5.346-3278. Free.Polaroid and Other Manipulations’’Lecture by Luciano Franchi de AlfaroIII on Wed Nov 9 at 3 in rooms211-12 of the School of the Art Insti¬tute, Columbus at Jackson.443-3710. Free.Whitney Biennial Film Exhibition andSelections from the Video DataBank. Tomorrow thru Nov 13 at theMuseum of Contemporary Art, 237E. Ontario. 280-2665 for schedule.$2, $1 students.Liz Atlas, small wood sculpture; OliviaPetrides, paintings; HannahDresner, drawings and paintings;Susan Zurcher, installation. Openstonight, 5-8, at Artemisia Gallery, 9W Hubbard. Thru Nov 26: Tue-Sat,11-5. 751-2016. FreeJames Grigsby, Tom Jaremba, MichaelMeyers, and E.W. Ross, oerformancetonight and tomorrow at 8:30 atN.A.M.E. Gallery, 9 W Hubbard.467-6550. $5, $4 students.Sue Gertz, paper sculpture and paint¬ings; Margot Gottfried, sculpture;Peter Mattei, installation. Opens to¬night, 5-8, at ARC Gallery, 6 W Hub¬bard. Thru Nov 26: Tue-Sat, 11-5.266-7607. Free.Duncan Hannah Paintings Opens to¬night, 5:30-8 at The Center Gallery,225 W Huron. 642-9588. Free.Two Performance Pieces by five fromDetroit, tomorrow at 8 at RandolphStreet Gallery, 756 N Milwaukee.666-7737. $3, $2 students.Richard Haas New projects by the cre¬ator of the illusionary murals, likethat on the side of the apartmentbuilding on LaSalle near Division.Tomorrow thru Nov 29 at RhonaHoffman Gallery, 215 W Superior.Tue-Fri, 10-5:30; Sat, 11-5:30.951-8828.'Free.A Work in Progress? A large outdoorsculpture is being erected on thecorner of Washington and State, infront of Marshall Fields. Or perhapserected is not quite the rightword...in fact, the large green dia¬phragm-like object has been in astate of construction for months now.That is, its base seems to be givingthem a lot of trouble — they rippedup the sidewalk months ago, buthave yet to finish putting it back to¬gether. As far as I can tell, the restof it, which appears to be circular,has just been sitting there all thistime, covered by its tarpaulin. Thefirst time I asked one of its construc¬tors several weeks ago what it was,he didn’t know — it was his first dayon the job. The second time I asked, Iwas told that it is a fountain. Itdoesn't look like a fountain. . — NMacsscssonj ********X£X30R30CX3BMCWORRY’S DELIINHUTCHENSON COMMONSNOW SERVINGFULL BREAKFASTSas low as99®7A.M. to 10 A.M.THE BEST BUYON CAMPUS! TEACHERS...You're NeededAll Over theWorld.Ask Peace Corps volunteers why they teach SpecialEducation or Math/Science in Africa. . . Ask othervolunteers why they work as Primary Educators inLatin America. 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St.In Kimbark PlazaPhone: 493-3355Sun.-Noon-Mid nightHours: Mon.-Thurs. 8am - lamFrL A Sat. Sam - 2amTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 1983—5NOW AT COPYWORKS ReZDLNDINSTANT CASSETTECOPYING SERVICE IN HYDE PKRK ON THE LAKEFAST 30 60 90 or 120 MINUTES TAPES COPY A ONE HOURCASSETTE IN LESS THAN 2 MINUTESINEXPENSIVE OUR REMARKABLY LOW COST INCLUDES A COPYCASSETTE ANO SERVICEMIRROR PERFECT YOU LL GET GUARANTEED PERFECTMONAURAL COPIES OR YOUR MONEY BACKWhat can you copy9 Just about anything including:lectures, seminars, languages, labs, meetings, college classes,sermons, sales messages, weddings, interviews, talking letters,word processing data, and computer programsCome in for our SI.00 OFF Introductory CouponCOPYWORKS, LtdThe Copy Center in Harper Court288-2233 • Complete computer roomwith Modem connection toDEC 20 computer oncampus• Shuttle bus at door toUniversity of Chicago &Michael Reese Hospital• 24 hour doorman/securitymaintenance/concierge• Convenient shopping inour Market-in-the-Park• Enclosed supervisedgarage Marinas nearbyNine minutes to LoopCarpeting/DishwasherCleaner/Valet ServiceCable TV 24-hour ServiceHealth ClubFabulous private roof-topgardenExpress bus at door toLoopMODEL OPEN DAILY 288-50505050-5020 South Lake Shore Drive Chicago, IL 60615ByThe Clinton CompanyThe Mei OrganizationPresentsA Bitter LoveChinese Movie with English SubtitlesSaturday, November 5th2:30 -10:30 P.M.Ida Noyes East LoungeFREE ADMISSIONREFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVEDEnjoy Luxury Hotel LivingMonthly rentals from $^50 Rooms includecolor television ; maid serviceAnswering ServiceWake-Up CallsValet ServicePeanuts Loungefeaturing Sports Vision.Peanut Member Drink(half-price anytime)Jazz Showcase (featured jaz;artists)Mayfair Theatre - SHEARMADNESSReduced room rates$29.00-$32.00- upon availBLACKSTONE HOTELT10TZKDAT AMD TODAY AT ONCI«<« 8««tk Michlfam Chief*, Illimmia M«OIfor Bmamtvatimma Phom« 4J7 - 4800 Talas 7S1I0T r—! 50cSATURDAY NIGHT DINNERSPECIALSAVEON ANYCOMPLETEDINNER(OVER *284)MORRY’S DELIINHUTCHINSON COMMONSj SAVE THE BEST BUY ON CAMPUS SAVEL——-Internship Support GrantsAvailable for Winter and Springof 1984The Women’s Board Internship Support pro¬gram will make available 5 grants of up to$400.00 for the Winter and Spring quarters of1984. Grants are available to students whowish to pursue an internship with a not-for-profit organization (e.g. government agen¬cies, cultrual agencies, community serviceorganizations), and for whom such an ex¬perience will represent a cost of foregone in¬come from another job or newly incurredexpenses.Applications must include a statement, notexceeding 2 pages in length, describing theorganization where they plan to intern, adiscussion of how the activity fits into theireducational plans, and an explanation of costsincurred. A letter of support from the agencyis also required.Applications should be submitted to theAssociate Dean of the College, Harper 241,no later than Wednesday, November 30,1983.V6—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983-THE GREY CITY JOURNALRAVI SHANKARNON-WESTERNSTRUCTURAL FORMSThe following interview took place lastweek between Pandit Ravi Shankar andDavid Blair Tout.DBT: Mr. Shankar, I’m delighted to haveyou here. One thing I find very interestingis the coming together, over the pasttwenty years or so, of Western and npn-Western musicians. LaMonte Young, "hiswife Marian, Terry Riley, and others allstudy the Kirana style of vocalizing withyour colleague Pandit Pran Nath. And ofcourse your own association with YehudiMenuhin, Philip Glass, Zubin Mehta (who isan Indian but is more of a Western per¬former) are very well-known. Glass alsostudied the tablas with your colleagueAlla Rakha. How did you get involved withWestern musicians, and how did this aug¬ment your own creative work as a compos¬er and performer?RS: Well, through about the last 27 years Ihave met scores of musicians. Some ofthem you’ve named are very famous.Some you have forgotten to mention —Jean-Pierre Rampal, Andre Previn, etc.Even Benjamin Britten. So it has been verylucky for me to meet these wonderful peo¬ple through different times. I’ve becomequite familiar with them, having had thechance to work along with them.Now one thing I want to make clear. Ihave tried to work with these people notin the manner of new expression, tryingto, you know, do something with Westernmusic. It is the Western musican that I havebeen with, and as persons, they are West¬ern. But the work that I have always done,or the compositions that I had done forthem were all based on Indian music, andmostly in the classical style. So that is onething I want to make clear. I have alwaysbeen in my home ground; I have not triedto do something that I don’t know. Yousee, I have not tried to play Bach or Beeth¬oven, a sonata, Verdi, jazz music, or any¬thing like that. But I have experimented inso many things along with these musicians,even musicans of jazz fame, and I had won¬derful times.DBT: So in other words, the Western musi¬cians have flocked to you, and havelearned from you...RS: Right. But, you know, I say this be¬cause there has been a lot of misunder¬standing, that I have been trying to syn¬thesize Indian and Western music. You see,it is the Western instruments and the West¬ern musicians that I have been associatedwith, but it has always been, you know,dealing with my own music.DBT: That brings up another point I want¬ed to get at. I’ve noticed, and have beenpleased by the fact that, over the past 20or 30 years or so, there has been a coales¬cence of some Western composers withsome of the ideas of Indian music. Balinesegamelan music, Ghanaian music, whichisn’t like what was done years ago whenpeople in the West tried to imitate thesound of a sitar or a gamelan; today peo¬ple are trying to understand the processesbehind them, such as the additive pro¬cesses involved in the rhythmic tala con¬structions. Why do you suppose that, in thepast ten or twenty years, composers suchas Steve Reich or Philip Glass, and coun¬tless others have been so taken by, in par¬ticular, Indian music, to the point whereGlass wrote an opera in Sanskrit called Sa-tyagraha which uses the Bhagavad-gita asa text, and Reich studied African rudimen-tal drumming in Ghana? Why do you sup¬pose there has been a greater acceptanceof non-Western music?RS: Well, I find that there have been threestages in such a synthesis, or whateveryou want to call it. The first was as earlyas the Russian composers like Rachmanin¬off, and some other Russian composerswho were mostly inspired by Middle East¬ern music. And then I find there have beena group of composers like Henry Cowell orAlan Hovhaness, Peggy Glanville-Hicks —these are a few names I remember, andthere have been more than that. This wasstarting from the forties, and through theearly sixties there have been some veryinteresting things. And they were all insome way or another influenced by Indianmusic or Balinese music. Then came theperiod since I started touring, and Indianmusic had more exposure. First it startedwith some jazz musicians like John Col-trane, who had some lessons from me, andothers like Don Ellis, John Handy, and afew others though we didn’t have personalcontact. Dave Brubeck was also very muchinfluenced by Indian music, rhythmic cycles, and things like that. Of course, youfind rhythmic cycles of 5, 7, 10, 11, inGreek music. And then, Philip Glass andothers have since very recently beenworking. Now, I heard Stockhausen playhis famous composition he calls Mantra. Iappreciated it very much just as a musicalpiece. It's a very modern, very avant-garde sort of thing. But I didn’t find any¬thing associated with mantra or what Istand for, the mantra as feeling. So, youknow, you can say you were particularlyinspired, but if the work doesn’t have any¬thing to do with the music, it’s, what shouldI say, rather curious to find you’ve takenthe name or some Sanskrit text, whichhave nothing to do with the music. You cantake a subject. You can name it Tantra, orMantra, or whatever it is. But it can bewhatever you feel — you have the right tofeel it. A creative person has the full free¬dom to do whatever he wants. There is nopolicy against, you know, a composerdoing anything. But it’s not the name thatis important to me. I feel that some influ¬ence of Indian music, and to utilize some In¬dian music in the proper sense along theWestern point of view — that would be in¬teresting to me. But I haven’t heard toomuch yet. Once in a while I hear, strangelyenough, in some television commercials, asbackground music, some very interestingIndian rhythmic structures. Anyway, it isinteresting to see that some people aretrying to do new things.DNT: Well I think also there is a greaterawareness of the structure. Steve Reichhas said “I don’t want to sound exotic;” hedoesn’t want to sound as if he’s imitatingAfrican music, and Glass didn’t want tosound as if he’s imitating Indian music, be¬cause unless you’re trained, I imagine, inthe ragas...RS: Exactly!DBT: I mean, a Western-trained musicianisn’t going to be very good at performingIndian music, as judged by Indian stan¬dards.RS: That’s what I mean. I’ll complete whatI wanted to say. Anyone who wants tomix, as such, and get something new out ofit, should know both systems equally well.And that's the reason why I started withmy own compositions, and never tried todo anything in the Western style. I onlytook for tone and color, range and dynam¬ics, all these Western instruments which Ifound have so much more than our instru¬ments. Our instruments have a lot of limi¬tations for orchestral purposes. They’regreat as solo instruments, because of thesympathetic strings, and so many factors.But I think that at this point one has toknow both systems to do something reallynew and unique.DBT: You mentioned before the interviewthat, although you were the person whobasically got Philip Glass started in newmusic and changed the course of his musicfor the better, you haven’t really followedhis music since then.RS: Unfortunately. I would love to, in fact.I met him just a few days ago in New York,and he said he would send me one of hisrecords. I have not heard his work yet, andI’m very curious to hear it.DBT: I’ll have to send you some tapes...RS: It was many years ago, I think 1964.He was in Paris, having lessons from NadiaBoulanger. In that period, to make anextra buck, he was playing as a commer¬cial artist for some films or radio, some¬thing like that. I was doing the music forthe film Chappaqua, and it was there that Imet Philip Glass. He came as one of the sta¬tion artists. So I met him while recordingthe music for Chappaqua in Paris. And inthe 6-7 day session, he was very curious toknow. I can’t say I taught him, but youknow I sort of told him many things aboutthe ragas, the constructions, and therhythmic structures. I really admire him tohave become so famous, and at the sametime he admits he had this influence.DBT: Well from what he's told me, it wassomething like a revelation because, and Ican say this coming from a similar back¬ground, Indian and other non-Westernmusic just isn't taught in conservatories.Maybe a handful.RS: Indian music?DBT: Indian music or any other form of non-Western music. And he wasn’t aware ofthis music until he met you. He had no ideaof the beauty or the great history and tra¬dition behind it.RS: Right, that’s true.DBT: Why do you suppose it’s been so ig¬nored? I mean, here you have a body of Ravi Shankarmusic that is certainly as great, if notgreater, than some Western compositions,and is traditionally passed down fromguru to disciple. It’s neglected, and I'venever understood why.RS: No, that’s wrong. The word “neglect¬ed” is absolutely wrong. It is not taught inthe manner in which Western music istaught, for the very simple reason that wehave always believed in this oral tradi¬tion, which has been handed down personto person. And this music can never, neverbe taught en masse, in a class, because youcan teach the rudiments, some fixed com¬positions, some fixed songs, somethingabout the instruments, but the music itselfis so fluid, it is something so different, andbecause of the improvisatory nature, itcannot be taught in the same manner. Be¬cause we don't take any visual help —when you say Western music is taught inthe conservatories and things, you see youdepend so much on the written-down sheetof paper, and that's how it makes it easi¬er. So it is not only the ears but the eyesalso that help you learn music. With us, it isonly the ear, and it is the way we imitatethe guru, and learning a lot of fixed thingsand remembering it. It’s like putting intothe computer all the datas. It’s exactly thesame form. So you know, it's completely adifferent approach. You don't have to beworried that it’s neglected.DBT: I didn’t really mean it like that. To acertain degree, the feeling a lot of peopleget in conservatories is that Western musicis everything, and these non-Western mu¬sical systems don’t even exist. It’s not aquestion of not teaching how to do ragas.They couldn’t be taught; I agree. But Idon’t think the conservatories even ac¬knowledge the existence of anything butBrahms or Bach, and I think that a lot ofpeople lose sight of the fact that there'ssuch a great body of musical literatureoutside of just the Western tradition.RS: Today you find a lot of good bookswritten by Indians as well as Westernersand one can get a better idea of Indianmusic than he could ever before. In fact—I’m not trying to sell my product—I myselfhave three cassettes and a book as a pack¬age. Now, you really cannot learn Indianmusic that way, fully. This was just meantto give an idea. And also, there are peoplewho know nothing about Indian music, andthis book will help them appreciate it. Itexplains a lot — all the forms, what to lis¬ten for, and there are also exercises, cer¬tain song compositions, which are veryhelpful.DBT: Now Indian music is basically, correctme if I’m wrong, more in the nature ofbeing solo music, very improvised, as con¬trasted with African music which is basical¬ly ensemble music How do you get pastthat? I mean, I know you’ve written works for sitar and orchestra. How have youdealt with the fact that Indian music andthe tradition you come from is pretty muchsomething like small chamber music, andhere you’ve augmented it by adding an or¬chestra?RS: You yourself said it correctly in the be¬ginning that our music is very individual,mostly solo music. Because I was commis¬sioned to write for the orchestra. I workedvery hard, and I composed the whole thingin such a manner that I have my sitar (thisis in-between where I have to improvise),and then I have a free line as a cue for theentry of whichever instrument, and itworked somehow — it was an interestingexperimentation. I’m not posing to saythat it has been a creation of somethingunique. In the second concerto, which I callRaga-Mala, because of my previous expe¬rience, I tried to do more complicatedthings rhythm-wise. And also I tried to usesome mare brass instruments which I hadtried to keep away from — trombone,tuba, and things like that. And somehow itwas very effective.DBT: Just as a closing comment, where areyou going from here as a composer andperformer? Are you still basically per¬forming your own music, or the ragas?RS: I can't help it — I have to composewhen things come into my mind. I'm neverfrightened to experiment. In fact I haveplayed with Japanese musicians, youknow, the koto and shakuhachi. And I wasin China about 6 weeks ago. That was myfirst trip to Mainland China, and I wasvery excited by this. It was like a com¬pletely new ground because for almost 25years there has been absolutely no connec¬tion between our countries. They have noidea about our music and culture. All theyknow about India and Indian culture issomething that they talk about from1500-2000 years ago when the Buddhistmonks came to India. I was surprised thatthey themselves say that acupuncturecame from India. I was shocked and sur¬prised to hear that. And all the martialarts — can you imagine? So as I was say¬ing. they invited me to come again, per¬haps next year I might go, to try out some¬thing of their tradition and instruments,you know, pipa and a few other instru¬ments. So this is something I do because Ilike to do it, it’s not because I have to do it.I’m now going to be working on some bal¬let and opera music in India, taking mytho¬logical subjects and using all the modernmethods, you know, multimedia. But onthe other hand, playing the sitar is mymain thing; it's what I love most, and Ihave some up-and-coming students and Iwould like to work with them as much aspossible in the same old guru-disciple sys¬tem. And I am going to be more in India,based in Delhi.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983—7LONELINESSJuly’s humid evening and Murray Avenue embraceand they are two lovers sweating.I close shop and step into heat.Smell of bread. Sun has sunkbut the top bricks of Greenberg’s Poultrystill catch gold.Joe the barber passes.His lover waits in a room above Koskoden Auto Repair.The Russian tailor calls.It’s the little Jewish bookseller, he says.Come to me, we’ll have dinner.Yop tvoi matt! Son of a bitch.In his shop, behind the fake furs,we bite tomatoes as if they were apples.A little whiskey to wash it down.Now, a little Russian music. The cassette uncoilsand while cockroaches pretend not to see,we put arms on each other’s shouldersas if yoking one another,and lumber to a woman he calls Galenawho has a voicelike the soap perfumed airthe laundry vents exhale,and endless breathingfrom homes of the happy.—John SchulmanSonnetHear the story of a man and three insects.Who found a bee floating in his coffeeone morning and thought nothing of it.At the office a fly wheeled hours overhead.Home he saw a slug aimed toward his door.This was near seven o’clock and justas he was about to make sense of the damn thinghis sight fuzzed, fatigue overcame him.And by morning only a vague memory,the slug gone as was its gel.In this nation where the Universe’s orderembraces us but does not include usthis ordinary man who fluctuates numbers in a high office,nearly viewed that which deepens below us.—John Schulman8— FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALf■.s.■ CHICAGO CHILDREN’S CHOIR5650 S. 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SUNDAYBUOUnSSf NOVEMBER 6th'MELLOW 8:00 PMMANDEL HALL mbWIT! -3 THE CATE BROS.STUDENTS $ 8NON-STUDENTS $15LIMIT: 2 PER UCIDAT THE REYNOLDSCLUB BOX OFFICE; • V;. : •THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 4, 1983—9MARIE CARDINALcontinued from page 1was fantastic — very intelligent, veryopen, very bright, very funny, veryhappy, very deep. It was not only a feel¬ing — it was obvious; you could read ev¬erything on the walls. Everywhere youcould read very important things, and youcould see fantastic, spontaneous drawingsin the street, and you could hear music,and you could also hear people speaking.It was fantastic. Well, it was utopia, per¬haps, but it was paradise for intellectuals.But, not only for intellectuals, because fi¬nally, when the workers were on striketoo, they became a part of it and they en¬joyed it very much, and they made theaterand they made music, and they talked witheverybody. Because there was no moretraffic in the streets. In St. Germain desPres and the university part of Paris, itwas impossible to go there with cars, be¬cause it was overcrowded with people —sitting in the streets, sitting everywhere,speaking and making music, or acting, orsharing poetry. You could pass from onegroup to another one, from one street toanother street — cars and military truckscouldn’t come in. We were closed insidethat small part of the city...thousands andthousands of people. It was fantas¬tic...Beautiful, very beautiful...It was agreat moment, it was a great moment forme. Especially since I was just finishing myanalysis. And the words were flashing ev¬erywhere.GCJ: That must have been wonderful, be¬cause you wouldn't have been able to ap¬preciate it if it hadn’t been for the analy¬sis...MC: Not that much. That freedom — that itwas written “It’s forbidden to forbid” —makes you think...but you forbid to for¬bid...?...(laugh) And you talk and talk.And things were very poetic — for in¬stance, once it was written: “under thepavement, the beach.” Because they tookthe pavement off the streets, boulevards,and avenues, to throw it at the police —but, you know, you put this pavement onsand. So at the same time it was true. Wewere walking on the sand everywhere.But at the same time that meant thatunder the revolution is happiness whichwas completely utopic. It was like a per¬petual newspaper, because there waswriting on the walls everywhere. Youcould tell a friend, “Come on, come on, I’veseen something fantastic” — and it wasn’tthere anymore...Something else was writ¬ten on it... It was like that, with such inten¬sity for two months, one day after an¬other, day and night and day. It was alivetwenty-four hours a day. It was great.And also the month of May was beauti¬ful...it was warm, all the chestnut trees ofParis. And the smell of spring, and thesummer coming — you know, the night ofParis is pink, I don’t know why, probablybecause of the lights, and the configura¬tion of the place...Well, it was para¬dise...You could see new theater, newmusic, new poetry. And all the differentlanguages were spoken.GCJ: Have you written about May '68?MC: No. Except this sentence. Probably it’stoo close to me; you have to find a distancebetween you and the thing you want towrite.GCJ: You said in the Moody lecture thatyou came to politics through your psy¬choanalysis.MC: Yes, well, I discovered that I was awoman. And at the end of my analysis Idiscovered what it was to be a woman —that is to say, not my body — I knew I hadthis body — but what it means in my soci¬ety. And, of course, with that came the po¬litical criticism of my society. That came im¬mediately, because it’s so stupid. So Iunderstood what it was to be a Frenchwoman in France at the end of the twen¬tieth century — how stupid the situation is,how unfair it is — and I began to be a polit¬ical person.GCJ: In what way did you become in¬volved?MC: I wrote — this book is very political. Inever wanted to be in a party. I’m not so¬cialist; I’m not from any French party. I’mon the left, as we say, but I don’t want tobe involved in any party, because they areall womanhaters — especially the Commu¬nists. So I’m not involved in feminist move¬ments. I don’t subscribe to this movement— I don’t have the card for that. Because inFrance they are very aggressive, very ho¬mosexual. I’m not against that, but I’m nothomosexual. And they are also man-haters. Feminism in France means that. Butthe women are fighting very roughly inFrance, but not within the feminist move¬ment. Feminist movements in France arejust nothing — perhaps five hundred peo¬ple, and that’s all — it’s very small. InFrance, and everywhere in Europe, eachfactory, each enterprise, each bank, has aplace for the workers, which is the proper¬ty of the workers. And there they are com¬pletely free to meet with anybody theywant, and to talk about anything theywent. I go almost every day to one or an¬ other enterprise, and I meet the womenwho are working there, and I try to helpthem find a better life. And that’s how thewomen are working together. They dothat in the town also, because in each blockthere is a social center where they canmeet. They generally go there to put theirchildren, their babies — or also to takecourses. The feminist movements are notwhat they are here, because of the organi¬zation of the towns. I know that from Can¬ada — I live part of my life in Quebec — Ican’t meet the women. Where?... Where?...Except in the feminist places, where theydon’t want to all come because they thinkthe feminists are against men. The dif¬ference between the States and Europe isthat in France or in Germany or in Belgiumyou can be where the women are.Also we are quite different because weare Catholic and you are Protestant. Wedon’t really practice anymore, but themorals are with us. This is a bad religionfor women. The image of the Virgin Maryand the Immaculate Conception sets up animage of the ideal mother and, by exten¬sion, the ideal woman. She is to reproducewithout sex. And, when a woman doeshave sex, she is not a virgin anymore, buta whore. And this puts women in a verydifficult position.GCJ: What are you writing now? Are youtaking a different direction or are you onthe same path as you were with The Wordsto Say It?MC: Yes, I am on the same path. I believethe writer is always writing the samebook. You can read the books of a man or awoman, a writer, and finally it’s only onebig thing. I really believe I’ll always writeabout the insanity and stupidity of rules,laws, codes. I can take different charac¬ters, but finally it’s the same thing.GCJ: Have you written about men?MC: In my last novel, which came out thisyear, just before the summer, half of thebook is the life of a man. But I was unableto go to the end. I don’t know what it is tobe a man. When Gustave Flaubert, said,“Madame Bovary is me,” he was right.She’s a strange character, very touchingand moving, he did his best to imaginewhat it is to be a woman — and he succeed¬ed to a certain extent. But also she’s more,and this more he can’t know. No man canknow what it is to be a woman, and nowoman can know what it is to be a man. Sowhen I was writing the life of this man Iwas unable to complete the story, becauseI was unable to imagine what it could be.And not physically, that’s the strangething. By working and asking questions ofall my friends I was feeling confidentabout writing in the first person about thelife of a man. And generally men readingthis book now say, “How coud you knowthat?” I say, well, I asked questions aboutmen — how they are when they have anerection, how they are when they want tomake love. How they are when they arenot in erection. So finally, after I don’tknow how mny descriptions by differentmen, I had the feeling of the instinct ofwhat it can be to be inside the body of aman. But what I was unable to understandwas the behavior of men, of a man in frontof children, for example, in front of thewife, in front of the family with a capital F.That, I understood, was quite different.And I was unable to go on. I stopped at themoment this man marries and has children,and then I pick up the story with the life ofa woman Clytemnestra.GCJ: You talk about having a man's senseof body, has your analysis made you moreaware of a connection between your mindand your body? •MC: Yes, for example, this morning I had atoothache. I wanted to work, and Icouldn’t, and I noticed the pain in my tooth.But I’m sure that will not become a tooth¬ache. Because I realize where it comesfrom. And that helps me very much, everyday. I don’t think we can be sick by chance.I think cancer is a kind of suicide, not offi¬cially — generally people yell at me when Isay this, but I believe that if you deeply gointo the life of somebody dying of cancer,you will find a big failure.GCJ: Why do you think your psychologicalillness manifested itself in your menstrualblood?MC: I believe that’s very simple. I’m veryclose to the beginning of humankind. I’mnot very complicated. A lot of people suf¬fering from big neurotic breakdowns,never somatize. So I wonder how they canget out of it, because for me all my prob¬lems were like houses. It was very easy,after, to follow the way they were show¬ing. It was hard, it was long, it was any¬thing you want — but I had a subject ofconversation. The others — I wonder whatthey can talk of? It must be very difficult.For me it was easy, always something inmy body, lighting, blushing, flushing —always. I was crying, “Oh, what’s happen¬ing with my eyes, my skin, with my leg” —but, speaking of that, it was easy to gofrom that to that to that. It was very easyto make associations. It’s a happiness. by J. DURKIN AND N. GOLDSTUCKERvL» -sL. si/ si/ si/ *!• si/ s^ sl» si/ sJL» si* ^ si/ si/ si/ si/ ^ si/ s^ si/ S^ S.L* ^ sj/ si/ <d/•Js 'J' 'J1* Jys ^s ^s *y» ^s /p> /p* ^ /^ /^s /^ ✓Jv JR ^s ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^****************************************THE BATHROOM SHOTSWATCH OUT!BRUNCH AT NEW LOCATIONGCJ BRUNCH 1 PM949 E54TH PLACE APT 3t6—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983-THE GREY CITY JOURNALPARTYOF THE FIRST PARTLAW SCHOOLhue. 60th st.9 P.M.-1A.M.Saturday November 5, 1983PERSONS UNDER 21 NOT ADMITTED3 Career Planning Workshopsfor Graduate Studentspm. Reynolds Club 201Thursday. 11/3* Seif-Assessment^Wednesday; - Developing a Job ObjectiveWednesday t/n,: Tbe Job Searek and the InterviewDesigned to holy clarify careergoals and developa timetable for personal career development:Career and Placement ServicesMORRY’S DELIinHUTCHENSON COMMONSNOW SERVINGCOMPLETE DINNERSLARGE VARIETYonly$2«4Example:V2 BBQ Chicken, Salad,Beans & RiceVeal Parmesan, Mostaccioli marian realty,inc.mREALTORStudio and 1 Bedroomk Apartments Available— Students Welcome —On Campus Bus LineConcerned Service5480 S. Cornell684*5400 RockefellerChapelMHHSUNDAYNovember 6,19839 a.m.Ecumenical Serviceof Holy Communion11 a.m.University ReligiousServiceWAYNE BOOTHDistinguished Service Professorin the Department ofEnglish Language and Literature,and the College12:15Carillon tour and recitalDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristKimbark Plaza1200 E. 53rd St493-8372I enjoy my contactLenses made byw/marinara sauce.bread & butter & salad5:30 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.THE BEST BUY ON CAMPUSMichael Marwick D.O.S. andMonica Kargl - Marwick D.D.S.Dental Practice1525 E. 53rd St.Room 604Hyde ParkBank Building752-788810% Student DiscountInsurance Accepted BIOLOGICAL/PHYSICAL SCIENCES ...You're NeededAll Over theWorld.Ask Peoce Corps volunteers why they ore using their Sciencemajor, minor or oprirude m health dimes and classrooms inMalaysia Why do They use Them in fish pond culture projectsond experimental forms in Western Samoa5 They II tell youtheir ingenuity ond flexibility ore os important os their degreesAsk rhem why Peoce Corps is the roughest job you'll ever loveInterested Seniors pick un anapplication and sign up forinterviews in Career Counselingon Nov. 8PEACE CORPS MOVE-IN CONDITION - 2bedroom, 2 bath condo in clean,light, modem elevator building withmany amenities. On the bus line foreasy trips to the Loop and campus.Priced to sell in the $50’s.NEAR CAMPUS - A SUPERLOCATION. Great condo associa¬tion. 1 bedroom, separate diningroom. Mid $40’s.CHARMING 1890’S HOME. 5woodbuming fireplaces. Victoriandetail plus lots of light. Garage andyard. Wonderful house for children.Do not miss this delightful house!TWO BEDROOM CO-OP WITHWOODBURNING FIREPLACE.Quiet building with a stable popula¬tion (many from U of C). Parkingand' garden plots available. All forthe eminently affordable price of$22,000!UNIVERSITY PARK - I bedroom, 1bath condo. High floor with southernexposure -campus view. Priced tosell at $39,000.LOVELY, SUNNY, ON CAMPUSCO-OP apartment. Make this 3rdfloor 1 bedroom unit your ownspecial retreat. View of midway fromyour dining room. Entertain inspacious, bright living room. Hard¬wood floors. Friendly building.Come take a look. Lease with optionpossible. PRICE REDUCED -$16,900.DRAMATICALLY DESIGNEDTOWNHOUSE. Cathedral ceilingwith roped-off gallery above, wood¬buming fireplace below. 1 largebedroom, office and family room inbasement. A backyard and off-streetparking, too. In the $70's.OWNER SAYS SELL IT! 6 roomcondo, completely redone -newwalls, new windows, new baths, new'kitchen, new electric, new... It's at56th and Harper. In the $60's.CHECK IT OUT!THE MEWS. Lovely, lovelybuilding. This 1 bedroom plus studyhas natural woodwork, beamed ceil¬ing, and a woodbuming fireplace. Asuper buy! $50 s.WALK TO REGENSTEIN. 56th andUniversity. 3 bedroom co-op. Verydesirable building. $60’s.LUXURY CO-OP - this veryspacious, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, co-opwith east/west exposures is new onthe market. It's all been redecoratedwith newly sanded floors. Thebuilding is special -24 hour security,parking, bike room, and elegant lob¬by. Call to see. $50's.IT’S ONLY A MINUTE TOTRAIN, bus. shopping, the park. Alarge 2 bedroom with formal diningroom in a well-kept courtyardbuilding. Great space. Great price.Flexible at $53,000.HAMPTON HOUSE STUDIO. It islovely and remodeled to perfection.Inexpensive living -the assessment isonly $51 per month. Call now. Greatsecurity and location.NEED A 2 BEDROOM OR A 1BEDROOM plus den? The choice isyours with this charming condo. Lotsof wood trim and lots of sun! Greatlocation too. Move-in condition.$60’s.SIT BY THE FIRE IN WINTER andenjoy the nearby beach in summer.You can even have your own gardenif you wish. A den is another plus forthis lovelv 2 bedroom co-op.$30,000.HILD REALTY GROUP13t>5 E. 53rd St.95£’-<ISOOTHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983—11“No, no they’re turning in, they knowsomething, and I’m not saying “they’re right,but at least they believe in something.”“And anything’s better than nothingJohn?” You’re still casting, pretendingwhat you see from here is wnat’s there.I think, we are too educated,too practised in patient distance.“Bullshit!” He’s up and vehement,it was cruel of me to bait him. |“Throw it away! Chuck it! Chuckall that cultural shit out,start again!” “Ok, ok,” he settles,fiours more wine, the steam risingrom the two bowls between us.I look at his face again. ,I see his hands working wood,caressing tables from tne knotted rootsof felled oak. He told me once,“You can’t teach with anger.” Ithought I understood, I didn’t.He became a friend out of jealousy,for the way his hands were callousedwith the brutal honesty of creation.By the time we sit togetheron the edge of the tub, brushour teeth, and compare hairlines,we are friends. “Y’know the Amish”he smiles, “are like children.Their sphere of understandingis like a tiny egocentric shellthat they’ve lowered over themselves.”John, you are full of love. You sleepin the coppola, while I’m in my old •«Intermediate Cold Type 1 army bag,surrounded by windows, the Iowa moon.I hear neighing, jump up intothe blind ught of the morning to seean Amish father and son, knife-straightabove the cushionless economy of tneir buggy.They do not hesitate, or even turn to seeme, naked in my unworked skin, staring out.—David Sullivan“JUDGE NOT YOUR LIFE BY OTHER LIVES”(from an Amish cookbook)I arrive late. Right or left?Needless to say I choose wrongwhichever, and have to double back.John hears the car comingup the long slant of dirt to hisone room schoolhouse, centeredin an ancient Amish communitysomewhere south of Iowa City.The giug is hot. slightly burntwith the bitter taste of almondsspeaking dumb fortunes in eye-shapesfrom the bottom of my bowl.He says, “life’s alot slower here,but steady. I’ve grown to likethe Amish, there’s such a senseof rightness in what they do.it’s as if they knew the answerwhile we fuck around, castinginto other cultures, cheatingon our friends, confessing our sins,and never touch anything.” He’s sadderthan I remember. “But aren’t they justing out? Turning their backs? 9*mDennis Stock12—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983—THE GREY CITY JOURNALCAREERS AND GRADUATE TRAINING INPUBLIC POLICY AND ANALYSISDo you want a career dealing with important public issues, but Law orBusiness School just doesn't seem the right way to get there? Con¬sider graduate training in Public Policy Analysis and Management.The Committee on Public Policy Studies at the University of Chicagoand the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University offer twoyear Master’s degrees stressing quantitative analysis of economic,political, social and organizational factors that influence public deci¬sions. Our graduates work in public, private and nonprofit organiza¬tions. They deal with issues such as: community economic develop¬ment, public finance, health care, international development, housing,regulation, social welfare, public ethics, arms control, energy, defensestrategy, transportation and urban decline.Representatives of both programs will lead an informal discussion ofcareers and graduate training in public policy analysis andmanagement:Tuesday, November 8,198312:00 noonPresentation: Graduate Programs andCareers in Public Policy and ManagementReynolds Club, Room 201All Years, All Majors WelcomeCUTCOLLEGE COSTS!!Live in your own Condo for LESS than student housing!Just $747 down and $268 per month.*• Rehabbed Courtyard Building• Near the Lakefront•Exercise Room•Sauna•Steps to CTAAinslie ParkCONDOMINIUMS840 W. Ainslie (4900 N)Chicago, IL561-4544•Plus taxes and assessmentsPut 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 prov ide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.— .All new kitchens and appliances —Community rcxim— Wall-to-wall carpeting — Resident manager— Air conditioning — Round-the-clock security— Optional inckxtr or outdoor — Laundry facilities onparking each tkxirStudios. One. Two and Three Bedroom apartments.One Bedroom from $505 — Two Bedroom from $700Rent includes heat, cooking gas. and master TV antenna.Call for information and appointment — 64 J 1406me1(h2 East 56th StreerIn Hyde Park, across the park fromV\‘ Museum of Science and Industry,i m,.Mv.nj. < yi-mv.nMn.” bt Mtn. pkx. !.. ON THE MIDWAYCharming two bedroom coop apartment in excellent condi¬tion. Treetop views of gardens and park. Lots of closets andstorage. Heated garage space included. Low assessments.$45,000. Kay Wertz.FAMILY HOME ON UNIVERSITY AVE.Keck designed - means quality of con¬struction; energy efficiency and goodstorage. Four bedrooms, two and onehalf baths, family room in the fullbasement. Private front yard -patio.1 Assigned parking in the rear.■$130,000. Mrs. Ridlon.PRICED RIGHT$65,000 will buy a condo near the lake on a quiet cul-de-sac. Three bedrooms, two full baths plus an extra den andenclosed porch. Modern kitchen, moderate assessments.Hilde Zurne (res. 684-0151).UNIVERSITY PARK BARGAINSBe within walking distance of the campus, Coop ShoppingCenter and the 1C. Amenities included in the building arehealth club with saunasbike room, hospitality room, andbright laundry room.• One bedroom facing south and with a garagespace for a bargain $39,500. Wilma Senser.• Two bedrooms, two baths on a high floor awayfrom street noises. Garage space included.$59,500. Jeanne Spurlock.GnM£Tc 21KENNEDY RYAN, MONIGAL & ASSOC.5508 South Lake Park667-6666>4BLE HAS CANON FOR LESS!CanonAllPROGRAMABLE LOW PRICEThe canon AE-1 PROGRAM is thesophisticated SLR camera that’sfocus-and-shoot simple to use! Itscomputer brain is programmed to giveyou perfect pictures in any light—evenwith flash! Batteries not included. $209W/50mm f1.8 lensINCLUDES CANON USA ONE YEAR LIMITEDWARRANTY REGISTRATION CARDm80-200UNO* • NilONPfNTAX • MMOiU■ OtTMFVS $10928 F/2.8 69.0035-105mm fX5-4.3 $169.0035*200mm 3.5-4.5 $279.0050-200mm 13 5-4 5 $179.0050-250mm 14.0-5.6 $249.0028-85mm 13 5-4.5 .*.....$179.00 CanonSURE SHOTABLE LOW PRICE• Fufly Automatic Focuj• Automatic Frim Winding• Automatic E*po»ure• Automatic Pop-Up Flash• Automatic Film Rewinding $119WITH CASE•BONUS COUPON—m r—bonus coupon *—-" ABLE!FREE FILM 4BLEI! Save 25%Roll of 24 exposure Fujicolor PrintFilm ASA 100 with every roll of1 35 processed and printedMUST II KODAKFUJI Buy 3 RollsGet 4th RollFreeI ! 1 ILFORD EXCEPT INSTANT FILM jI OFFER EXP 11-26-83 || OFFER EXP 11-12-83 jCAMERASTORESINC.PASSPORT i.D. PHOTOS WHILE YOU WAITOimlitv film rl^volopimg 1515E. 53rdChicago, IL752-3030HRS-MON -SAT 9 am - 6 pmThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4. 1983—9Bloom to hold fundraiserBy Cliff GrammichSupporters of Aid. Larry Bloom willhold a fund-raiser dinner Tuesday for apossible state’s attorney candidacy bythe alderman, although two membersof the dinner’s planning committee dis¬agree on whether attendance is supportfor that candidacy. Leon Despres saidthe dinner was meant to be “encour¬agement” to Bloom, while 43rd WardAid. Martin Oberman said his partici¬pation would be “no indication” of po¬tential support for a Bloom candi¬dacy.Despres has long been an “indepen¬dent stalwart. The 5th Ward aldermanfor many years, Despres has supportedmany independent causes, includingBloom’s recent re-election and HaroldWashington’s mayoral campaign.“He wants to run,” Despres said ofaspirations for the state’s attorney’s of¬fice. “He can’t declare until his poten¬tial supporters know if they can sup¬port him. We think of this dinner asencouragement to think of himself as acandidate.” Despres added that he ex¬pects Bloom to declare in November, ifhe runs, and seek the endorsement ofthose who will give it to him.“I think he will go for any endorse¬ment he can get,” Despres said, whenasked if Bloom will seek the endorse¬ment of the Cook County Regular Dem¬ocratic Organization Central Commit¬tee. That organization will slatecandidates for various offices Nov. 21and 22. The filing deadline for theMarch 20 primary is in December.Oberman would not commit himselfon a confrontation between Bloom andincumbent Cook County State’s Attor¬ney Richard M. Daley. He said he iscurrently friendly with both Bloom andDaley.“Larry’s my friend,” Oberman toldthe Maroon when asked why he was at¬tending the Bloom fund-raiser. Ober¬man also noted he was currently on afund-raising committee for Daley.Oberman declined endorsement at thistime, saying “there is no definite indi¬cation either is going to run, and it’stherefore not clear that they’re bothgoing to run.”1st District factsA new US Census Bureau studyshows the 1st Congressional District tohave one of the highest poverty and un¬employment rates in the nation. Thedistrict’s 92.1 concentration of blacks isalso the highest among the nation’s 435Congressional districts. The 1st Dis¬trict elected Oscar dePriest as the firstblack Congressman since Reconstruc¬tion in 1928.The census figures show the 1st Dis¬trict with more than 31 percent of itsresidents living below the povertylevel, the fifth highest rate in the nationbehind three New York districts andone district in Mississippi. The 1st Dis¬trict has the fourth highest unemploy¬ment rate among Congressional dis¬tricts at 13.5 percent.The 2nd Congressional District, an¬other black South Side district, has anunemployment rate of 13.1 percent,10th highest among the nation’s dis¬tricts. The concentration of blacks inthat district is 70.3 percent, making itthe seventh highest in the nation. TheWest Side’s 7th District, with a 66.9 per¬cent black constituency, is the eighthhighest.HARCcontinued from page one“We’re trying to listen to the day-to-day movements of the housing systemand suggest alternative ways of finetuning it.”The events of the last few quartershave occurred with an increased con¬cern for student life in the housing sys¬tem. All major dorms are planning awide range of activities, suggesting ifthe current energy level of IHC andHARC members keeps up, studentsshould see significant impact on resi¬dence halls’ social life.“There are 2000 students in the hous¬ing system and each one spends moretime in the dorm than in the classroom.It’s imperative that we make it enjoy¬able,” Aronson said.10—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November Oberman has long been a City Coun¬cil ally of Bloom; however, he has de¬ferred from Bloom in recent elections.In 1980, Oberman supported Daley,while Bloom backed Republican in¬cumbent Bernard Carey; 1982 sawOberman support County PresidentGeorge Dunne for re-election whileBloom supported challenger Carey;and Oberman backed Daley in themayoral primary while Bloom support¬ed Washington.Mayor Harold Washington will at¬tend the Bloom fund-raiser, and sever¬al of his allies will be there, includingUS Rep. Charles Hayes (D-lst); StateRep. Barbara Flynn Currie (D-26th);Aid. Danny K. Davis (29th), a candi¬date for Congress in the 7th District;Aid. Perry Hutchinson (9th); Aid.David Orr (49th); Edwin “Bill” Berry,formerly of the Urban League; andJuan Velasquez, a Hispanic communi¬ty activitist who was a 25th Ward alder-manic candidate and who will run forDemocratic committeeman in thatward next spring.Leon DespresFRIDAYHillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Serviceat 5:45 pm.Hillel: Egalitarian Traditional Shabbat Ser¬vice at 5:45 pm.Hillel: Adat Shalom Dinner at 6:30.United Armenian Cultural Association Lec¬tures. 7:30 pm JRL A-ll.Square Dance. 7 pm. Ida Noyes.UC International Folk Dance Festival open¬ing workshops. 8 pm Ida Noyes.Microbiology Dept: Mechanisms of Activa¬tion of Oncogenies in Viral and Non ViralNeoplasea. 2:30 pm Billings P117Intramural and Sports: Basketball Manag¬ers’ Meeting.Career & Placement: BBDO, Pre-recruitingHillel honorsBy Anna HupertHillel Foundation at the Universityof Chicago will hold a benefit dinnerSunday to honor Nell Pekarsky, and toraise money for Hillel’s recently estab¬lished endowment fund.Pekarsky has been an activemember of Hillel for over 45 years,since her late husband, Maurice Pe¬karsky, served as rabbi there until1965. She has been especially activesince the creation of the Hillel Governi¬ng Board in 1971.“People see Nell as a nice, sweet,gracious lady,” said Rabbi DanielLeifer, the current rabbi of Hillel, “butshe’s much more. She’s bright, intelli¬gent, perceptive — she’s a very smartlady and has a real understanding ofthe Jewish community.”Pekarsky served on the board of theDrexel Home for many years, saidLeifer, and knows how to establish re¬lationships and alliances. “She has agreat reservoir of warmth and affec¬tion among many alumni and facultywho have been active at Hillel, that4, 1983 NEWS ANAlYStSillllllllllUllNew dimension for mayorBy Cliff GrammichThe future of Aid. Larry Bloom’sstate’s attorney campaign may not reston the success of his Tuesday fun¬draiser as much as on how MayorHarold Washington decides to react tothe Republican candidacy for that of¬fice by Richard Brzeczek, former po¬lice superintendent and Washingtonnemesis. Washington may focus his in¬fluence in the upcoming campaign atsetting the former top cop back ratherthan necessarily helping an ally unseatincumbent Cook County State’s Attor¬ney Richard M. Daley.Brzeczek has several strengthswhich will help him in his upcomingbattle for the state’s attorney’s officeand his possible fight as a Republicancandidate for mayor in 1987. Thesestrengths could enable him to do whatBernard Epton couldn’t — beat Wash¬ington. Whereas Epton is a liberalHyde Park Jew, Brzeczek is a Catholic,Polish Northwest Side resident who cancapitalize on a “law and order” image.These factors should help the formerpolice superintendent capitalize evenmore than Epton could on anti-Wash¬ington sentiment. Brzeczek’s new¬found Republican status will help himget suburban support in his race forstate’s attorney.When one considers Brzeczek’s for-midability as a 1987 mayoral candi¬date, it seems surprising that he isseeking the state’s attorney’s office. Awin there would solidify his position forthe next mayoral election, but a losscould taint his credibility as a futurecandidate.That realization by Washington mayadd a new dimension to the questionover a mayoral endorsement. If Wash¬ington were to endorse Bloom, he maybe able to rekindle the emotions whichhelped get him elected mayor. Howev¬er, it is hard to imagine that staunchWashington ally Bloom, as the Demo¬cratic nominee, could win the supportof usually Democratic voters whoopted for Epton last April. Rather,those voters would be more likely tosupport Brzeczek.Yet Washington support of Daley is Larry Bloomhard to imagine. While Washington didsay last April he would support Daleyfor re-election, that statement camebefore Daley allies in the City Councilbacked Vrdolyak in the polarizingWashington-Vrdolyak Council organi¬zational battle. Washington support forDaley is hard to imagine when one con¬siders that Washington, the championof Democratic party loyalty in the mu¬nicipal election, supported BernardCarey over Daley in the 1980 election.If Washington were to put aside dif¬ferences and support Daley, though, itmay be because he realizes Daley’sbetter chance to defeat Brzeczek, themore immediate threat to Washing¬ton’s personal political future. Whilesome speculate that Daley may havelost some white support for causing theso-called split in the white voters in theFebruary primary, it is hard to imag¬ine that this alleged white antipathytowards Daley approaches the blackdislike of Brzeczek, which culminatedin Washington’s campaign pledge tofire the former police superintendent.A Bloom-Daley fight, limited to thosetwo principle antagonists, would likelysee Washington support Bloom. Yet themayor may, but not certainly, be look¬ing beyond 1984 if he decides to discour¬age a candidacy which could not defeatBrzeczek.CALENDARinformation meeting. 12 noon ReynoldsClub 201. Sign up.Music Dept: Vermeer String Quartet: 8 pm.Mandel Hall. Tickets at Mandel Box Office,89, $6.SATURDAYMusic Dept: Collegium Musicum: 8 pm,Bond Chapel. Free.UC INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCEFESTIVAL: Workshops 9 am, 12:30 pm. IdaNoyes. Folk Dance Festival Concert; 8 pmMandel Hall. $4, $5. Folkdance Party; 10 pmIda Noyes.Hillel: Yavneh (Orthodox) Shabbat Serviceat 9:15 am.Hillel: Upstairs Minyan (Conservative)Shabbat Service at 9:30 am.Crossroads: Buffet Dinner 6 pm $3.Pekarskygoes back to the ’60s and ’50s. Thosepeople are our key supporting alum¬ni,” he said.Leifer added that by honoring theperson, supporters were honoring theinstitution. Another aim of the dinner,he said, was “to raise consciousness ofHillel and its work” among alumni andcommunity members.The goal of the endowment fund is toraise additional monies for the pro¬grams at Hillel, and for the refurbish¬ing and renovation of the Hillel Houseat 5715 S. Woodlawn. So far, Hillel hasreceived $60,000 in pledges and contri¬butions, out of a targeted $200,000.Leifer said that he is hoping to collecthalf of that by the end of the year.The principal speaker is PhillipKlutznick, former secretary of com¬merce and former ambassador to theUnited Nations. Others on the programinclude Ted Cohen of the U of C philoso¬phy department, and MaynardWishner, president of the Walter HellerCo. A crowd of 200 is expected for thedinner, to be held at 6 p.m. in Ida NoyesHall. SUNDAYCrossroads: Open house. 3:30 pm.Hillel: Bagels & Lox Brunch. 11:00 am.$1.75/sandwich.UC International Folk Dance Festival:Workshops 9 am, 12:30 pm in Ida Noyes.Music Dept: University Chamber Orches¬tra; 8 pm, Goodspeed Recital Hall. Free.Rockefeller: University Memorial Concert.Bach solo cantata 160 and #80, and ChoralePartita on O Gott, du frommer Gott. 3 pm.free.Oriental Institute Films: Megiddo: City ofDestruction. 2 pm, Oriental Institute Audi¬torium.Rockefeller: 9:00 Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion. 10:00 am Religious Instructionfor Children. 11:00 am University ReligiousService. 12:15 Carillon Recital and TowerTour.MONDAYCrossroads: 10:00 Beginning English, 10:45Intermediate English, 7:15 Amnesty Inter¬national Meeting.Career & Placement: Morgan Stanley andCompany Management Training Programrecruitment.Intramurals and Sports: Basketball begins.Chemistry Seminar, 4 pm HGS 101.Chess Club: 7 pm instruction, 7:30 games.Career & Placement: Georgetown Universi¬ty School of Business. Group meeting 1:00pm Sign up.Center for the Study of Industrial Societies:Myth and Symbol in Poland’s SolidarityMovement. 4 pm. Harper 103.Hillel: Yiddish Class 5:30 pm Jewish Choir 8pm. PHOTOBYNANCYCLEVELANDPro-life reasoncontinued from page four“fertilized zygote” (Redundancymarches on.) because we cannot — thesanctity of human life does not dependon any grants which living manchooses to extend to such life. Rather,human life is sacred because of some¬thing which inheres in it, somethingwhich does not stem from human con¬vention. It is commonly called the soul— and this does not necessarily haveany religious implications. This soulprimarily distinguishes human lifefrom all other forms of life. It is the es¬sential characteristic of human beings,making them all equal. Vaunted rea¬son, for example, is not man’s definingcharacteristic, for if it were, those menwho could reason better than theirneighbors would be superior to them —has anyone heard any attacks on thedoctrine of human equality lately? No,what is particularly special in man ishis soul, his inherent worth, which doesnot derive from any values placed on itby various groups of men. Most menwho recognize the existence of the soulwould assert that its worth, which can¬not be quantified because the soul ispriceless, comes from God, but oneneed not resort to religious explana¬tions, as I stated earlier. However, try¬ing to explain the soul’s worth requiresat least the recognition of an orderhigher than man’s. Such a recognitionmay seem offensive to some, but when¬ever man points his order as the high¬est, human life consequently suffers.Men are prone to act recklessly whenthey think themselves supreme. Andwe Pro-Lifers believe that abortion is amanifestation of such recklessness, for•I destroys the priceless soul.Now. Pro-Life arguments such as theone to which the preceding paragraphalludes can be and often are counteredrationally, but Mr. Bowin’s letter cer¬tainly makes no attempt to offer a ra¬tional opposition to Pro-Lifers. Basedon a total misunderstanding of the Pro-Life movement, it attempts satire bychronicling a silly little story about abunch of silly little cells who have noconcept of the true meaning of cellulardivision. (Never was David Brooksmore sorely missed.) As it containsideological misconceptions, it is full offactual misrepresentations: I supposethat Mr. Bowin’s discussion of biopsyas a “form of murder” alludes to thespecious argument that a fetus is partof a woman’s body as, say, a tumor is.The obvious analogy with which to cor¬rect this popular Pro-Choice analogy isthat the woman is to the fetus as theshelter is to the man. But this is besidethe point, for Mr. Bowin cares not forargument but for inane humor, towhich one can respond quite inanely:“Mr. Bowin, if you can show me, say, afinger in the process of becoming ahuman being, then I might agree thatbiopsy is a form of murder. Until then,please don’t tell me that every cell nu¬cleus can generate a human being, forI shall disagree.” But one hesitates torespond rationally to each of Mr.Bowin’s silly charges. One prefers totreat them with the contempt they de¬serve, as I shall demonstrate in the fol¬ lowing sample response to Mr. Bowin’ssuggested method of impregnatingwomen (via douches containing viralversions of his sperm): “Mr. Bowin, ifyou are as important as your ideas,then no Catholic mother need worryabout being impregnated by your self-styled demon-seed.” Oh, Abortion,where is thy sting?Michael RabiehSecond-year student in the CollegePatronize bankTo the editor:Banking options for students in HydePark are indeed limited, as NathanSchoppa explained in the Oct. 11Maroon. In fact, we don’t have conven¬ient access to any banks with ‘reason¬able’ minimum balance and servicecharges for checking accounts.A meaningful choice is available,however. That is, one can choose to dobusiness with a bank which offers atangibly superior record of investmentin our South Side neighborhood. Thatbank is South Shore National, a smallinstitution at 80th and Jeffery Blvd.(south of Jackson Park). Ten yearsago, this bank was rescued from amove to the suburbs and since hasmade itself a national reputation inpursuing innovative strategies to re¬build the commercial and residentialinfrastructure of its community.To which other banks is South Shoresuperior? A study soon to be publishedby a neighborhood study center at theUniversity of Illinois compared SouthShore with four other banks, none ofwhich unfortunately were of HydePark. Included in the comparison wereContinental and Amalgamated, two'downtown’ bunks, and Independent.'!*and Seaway, two black-owned neigh¬borhood banks, located not far fromSouth Shore. When deposits and loans(on hand as of late 1978) were com¬pared in a 15-square-mile area from63rd St. to 95th, and Halsted to theLake, it was found that South Shore re¬turned to the area as loans almost 40percent of the area are deposits it hadreceived. Continental returned lessthan 20 percent, and the other banksless than 10 percent. Since over $80 mil¬lion of deposits were involved, theseconclusions seem not trivial.Turning to the ‘Money Network’ ma¬chines hardly seems the way to escapethe “local banking oligopoly,” as Oct.21 letter-writer Jonathan E. Hardis de¬scribes our poor local banking choicesin Hyde Park. He points, after all, thatthe Money Network is run by Continen¬tal. Continental is the sixth (I believe)largest banking corporation in the US.Why not turn to a small local bankwhich is making determined strides tostrengthen the economic base of itshard-hit community? I doubt (frompersonal experience) that South Shorecustomers save on banking fees. Butdeposits can be sent in by mail, whilestudents can cash checks at the Bur¬sar’s office. Registered students neednot suffer too much inconvenience intaking their business down to SouthShore.Stewart W. HermanDivinity SchoolSouth Sidecontinued from page fourSouth Side in large numbers. Dur¬ing the 1970s, the first district lost20 percent of its population. Inorder to keep it in existence forthe 1980s, map makers extendedits boundaries in virtually everydirection, bringing in voters fromother urban districts, which inturn were stretched into the su¬burbs to gain back the populationthey gave up.Some of the district’s middleclass professionals live aroundthe Michael Reese Hospital com¬plex, newly added to the districton its northern border. Otherslive in Chatham, which has beena prosperous black residentialneighborhood since the 1950s.Some blue-collar workers at thesouthern end of the district workin the steel mills of South Chica go.Many of the district’s poorerblack residents live in publichousing projects, buildings seenas enlightened urban renewalwhen built in the 1950s but now-derided as “vertical ghettoes.”One of them, the Robert TaylorHomes, is the largest such proj¬ect in the country. It extends for25 blocks and houses 75,000 peo¬ple.”My friends, I too saw Amy Eiden’sdescription of the South Side, but I justlaughed. I think her article was well-in¬tentioned and she probably does noteven understand why you were so of¬fended. Besides, I support any effortsof the people around me to break out oftheir convenient psychological bar¬riers, whether they are black or white.In my old age, I am beginning to learnto ignore silly people and not try to planor live my life around a commitmenttoward changing “what white people Irked by pesky leaflet passerTo the editor:I was innocently walking by thecampus bookstore on 58th Street today,on my way to develop a role of film thathad been exposed on a weekend trip toWisconsin, when suddenly a leaflet waswhisked in front of my face, and a de¬termined voice accompanying the ges¬ture said “Good-day!” Being liberal-minded, and respecting the views andsentiments of fellow colleagues and cit¬izens, I courteously retorted with asmile and a “Thank-you” and walkedon.It took me two steps to realize thatthe sheet was in support of Reagan andPercy and their persistence in Grenadaand Lebanon. It took me two moresteps to retrace my previous two steps,and return the sheet to the young manwho was still distributing, he was vis¬ibly upset when I added; “I don’t sup¬port your views, so I would like to re¬turn it.” (After all he could give it tosomeone who did.) I left to proceed onmy way when I was approached by yetanother distributor of pamphlets. Sheaccosted me rather more ferociously,and shoved a pamphlet in my book¬laden arms. I refused it and repeatedmy stance on the matter; “I don’t sup¬port the cause, but thank-you.” In an il¬lustrious display of torn sentiment sheblurted out. “You’ll be learning tospeak Russian soon!!” I said some¬thing obscure in Greek (the only lan¬guage I could come up with that Ithought she might recognize as Rus¬ sian) and continued on my day’s er¬rand.It was not until I’d gotten through thestruggle at the Bookstore (both withthe change in the bottom of my purse,and the line that meanders around the“film” desk) that something odd oc¬curred to me...Why should I, a citizenof this country, and a resident of thiscity, be obliged (and what’s moreagreeably so) to read and listen to an¬other fellow citizen profess and perpe¬trate his/her beliefs in a public space,when in return, upon stating my views Iam provoked? I believe firmly in free¬dom of speech but I cannot profess totolerate provocative criticism of mybeliefs by some other party who is re¬sounding his/hers. It would be my hopethat instead of attacking me (in tone,manner and implication) the person onthe street who is distributing pam¬phlets supporting a specific policy orpolitical view, might be better advisedto engage me in an informtive discus¬sion relaying to me the potential advan¬tages or good in his beliefs, and the po¬tential follies in mine. (On a campusthat traditionally holds such intellectthis would seem quite logical for we allhave questions.) A discussion or ex¬change on that level might even con¬vince me of another point of view—butI can assure anyone that anger andthreats won’t.Amy GunvilleBiology majorIHC president reports on HARCTo the editor: tem-wide issue which we shall addressThe Inter-House Council instructedme to write to the Maroon about theCouncil’s actions and intentions thisyear.The Council’s most pressing concernis the clarification of its relationship toHARC. Although the vice-president ofIHC is the chairman of HARC, this ex¬perimental body meant to foster inter¬dorm contact is independent of IHC.Although IHC donated nearly all of itssurplus funds from last year and near¬ly all of its allocations for the currentyear, together totalling over $1000, IHChas no control over how HARC distrib¬utes its funds. However, as an organi¬zation, which IHC and PresidentGray’s Student Advisory Committeetogether formulated and brought to ex¬periment, HARC especially intereststhe Council. HARC is a housing svs- through helping it to fulfill its purposeand student mandate. IHC, through itsHARC support committee, shall pro¬vide services to HARC including listsof House/Dorm presidents, budgetplanning, and creative party themes.IHC has relegated the funding of so¬cial activities to HARC. leaving advo¬cacy issues as our sole concern. Ourhousing discipline, housing services,legal, and economics committees re¬view housing issues ranging from dis¬ciplinary appeals and dorm security tofood coupons and board contracts. IHCrecommends and gathers support forchanges beneficial to all students in thehousing system. IHC represents stu¬dents. not the housing office, and ourvoice shall be heard this year.John F. VailIHC presidentWork/Studycontinued from page one *ferral appointment, Weiss met withApril Norton, the Work/Studv coordin¬ator, who told him again that “therewould )e no problem,” and made a sec¬ond referral appointment.During the week beginning Oct. 17,however, the CPS realized that itsWork/Study money was going to runshort, and cancelled the referral ap¬pointments for that week. When Weisscontacted them again, he was told thatthe program did not have the money topay his wage. “They gave me a sorry-see-you-next-year speech,” he said.“What could I do? The Blue Gargoylecould only afford to pay $1.35 an hour.think.” Anyway, according to Congres¬sional Quarterly, a number of blackresidents of Chicago have apparently“arrived.”Sometimes I wish we hadn’t. Eachtime I am forced to sign up for yet an¬other round of moderate interest stu¬dent loans, I storm into the College AidOffice and give Gerard Reiser moregrief. “Don’t you know that I’m notfrom the su-burbs? Remember? —We’re supposed to be the scum of theearth.” And then I begin my SteveMartin routine — “I was bo-o-orn apoor black child on the South Side ofChicago...” Perhaps you will be happyto know that these yearly encountershaven’t cut any ice. Reiser continues tolook up at me and reply, “nice try.”Amazing how certain U of C depart¬ments can be so sociologically up-to-date. And that’s progress9Lisa ArmstrongAlmost all but BA paper studentin the College;West Chatham resident since iy62 but quitting my job meant breaking thehearts of 30 little kids,” said W’eiss.Faced with the option of making upthe lost $1500 from his pocket or takingout an NDSL (National Direct StudentLoan) for an equal amount. W’eiss wentto Assistant Dean of Students NancyO’Connor, who in turn contacted Deanof Students Herman Sinaiko. “DeanO’Connor and Sinaiko were very help¬ful,” said W’eiss. “They went to the As¬sociate Dean of the College Taub andthe Ombudsman, who in turn took myproblem to the Dean of the UniversityCharles O’Connell and to the presi¬dent’s office.”After the supplemental funding forthe program came through. W’eiss wasreinstated in his job, and put on theprogram. But he is still unhappy withthe CPS’s handling of the situation. “Ihaven’t gotten any help from them.”he said. Criticizing the excuses offeredfor causing the problem. Weiss asked“W’hy didn't they make it clear fromthe beginning” that there was going tobe a shortage of funds. “They musthave known that adding students to theprogram and increasing the percent¬age of the wage me program pays wasgoing to cost them more. But they wereadvertising in the Maroon for employ¬ees to create Work/Study jobs right upuntil the day they closed the office (be¬cause of the shortage of funds),” hesaid.For the moment, at least, it appearsthat everybody who found aWork/Studv job will be paid a wagefrom one source or another. But as theyear progresses, more students willenter the program, and it will have tobe decided how to allocate the remain¬ing money that Monson calls “a very-precious resource.” A decision on howthe program should continue will betorthcoming today or Monday, accord¬ing to Monson.The Chicago Maroon—Friday November 4. 1983—11Concordia sweeps v-ballersBy Spencer ColdenIn the last game of the season, theUniversity of Chicago women’s volley¬ball team went up against a strongerand taller Concordia College teamTuesday night at the Field House. Al¬though the match score of 3-0 in favorof Concordia looks lopsided, the veryclose game scores tell a differentstory.In the first game the Maroons tookan early lead but were unable to hold it.mmPHOTOS BY ARA JELALIANMaroons’ Stephanie Grossmandives for a save against Concor¬dia Tuesday. The Maroons had the lead, 6-2, whenConcordia started its comeback, tak¬ing the next nine points in a row for an11-6 advantage. Some strong servingby Lynn Birczak cut Concordia’s leadto 11-9, but Concordia took the next fewpoints and thus the game, 15-12.In the second game Concordia tookthe early lead, moving atop by a com¬manding 10-3 margin. But the Maroonsnetted the next ten points, as theysurged to a 13-10 lead. Concordia wentahead, then, 14-13, and after theMaroons tied the score, Concordia cap¬tured the next two points to win thegame, 16-14.The third game was the same story.Concordia assumed an early lead, 13-5,and although that score seemed insur¬mountable, the Maroons again camevery close to winning. The final scorewas 16-14, indicating that the game andmatch could have gone either way.Since Concordia had many tallerplayers in their lineup, they were ableto block very effectively against theshorter Maroons. Coach Rosie Reschattributed this lack of success to theheight difference, and also the fact thatthe Maroons “didn’t get into therhythm.”The Maroons will lose four seniors tograduation, but there are 13 returningplayers. These include starting settersDana Pryde and Shiela Dugan, and hit¬ters Colleen Thorne, Celeste Travis,and Wendy Pietrzak.Crew brings home medals_ J 1 4 C»_ CfofA oBy Anna LeiderThe University of Chicago Co-edCrew Club set two course recoxus iaaiweekend when it travelled to Knoxvillefor the 7th annual Head-of-the-Tennes-see Regatta. Setting records were theMen’s Lightweight 4 and the Men’s No¬vice 4 while Chicago’s other entry, theWomen’s Novice 4, finished a respect¬able second.Surrounded by magnificent cliffs andbrilliant fall foliage, the Men’s Ligh¬tweight 4 (Carla Pritchett, cox wain;Jon Pritchett, stroke; Mark Sexton, 3;Greg Prince, 2; and Ted Beutel, bow)had no problems defending their Head-of-the-Tennessee title. They rowed the5000-meter course in a time, the Men’sNovice Four (Ian Sweedler, coxwain;C.M. Hettrick, stroke; Jim Wooten, 3;Jim Meyer, 2; and Mark Shapiro, bow)also earned first place medals. Finish¬ing the course in a time of 21:13.0,theirs was a much closer race as they edged out 2nd place Wayne State by amere 1.25 seconds.The Women’s Novice 4 (IanSweedler, coxwain; Molly Moon,stroke; Anna Leider 3; JoAnn Butler,2; and Eva Merchant, bow) was able toovercome early interference from oneof host Tennessee’s boats to finish 2ndin their race. In head races, a passingboat is always given the right-of-way.Unfortunately for Chicago, Tennesseerefused to yield causing the two boatsto lock oars. Both crews were forced toa complete stop in order to disentanglethemselves and reset their courses.Chicago rapidly pulled away and fin¬ished the course in a time of 23:55.46.While this race marked the end of theseason for Chicago’s highly rankedMen’s Lightweight 4, other member’sof the club prepare themselves for thisweekend’s “Frostbite Regatta” in EastLansing, and next weekend’s Head-of-the-Chattanooga in the warmer climateof Atlanta.Aurora barrages soccerBy Anthony CashmanThe U of C soccer team ended its sea¬son on a disappointing note Wednes¬day, losing to Aurora, 6-1, at Aurora.The Maroons finished with a 5-7-2 re¬cord.The U of C gained the early advan¬tage with a goal in the first ten minutesof play. Mark Scolforo carried the balldown the wing and crossed it to ToddSilber. Silber executed the “dummy”perfectly, allowing the cross to travelthrough his legs untouched. Bo Floresreceived the ball on the other sideabout 18 yards out, and hit the ball in¬side the left post for his first goal of theyear.The Maroons continued to applypressure, and the first half was playedevenly. “We had a lot of chances andthey were getting frustrated,” saidScolforo.During halftime, coach Barry DeSil-va warned his team about the wayAurora was going to play in the secondhalf. He explained that Aurora wasranked highly among small collegesand needed this victory to make thesmall college championships. There¬fore they would push their play for¬ward in the second half.Despite Chicago’s readiness for thechallenge, several costly errors turnedthe tide of the game. About 20 secondsinto the scond half, Guido Sabelli scored an “own goal” when the ball hewas trying to clear away from troublewound up in the net.Shortly afterward the Maroons didnot execute their offsides trap effecti¬vely, and Aurora’s 3-on-l breakawayresulted in a goal.The Maroons then suffered a barrageof goals. Aurora scored its third goal ona throw-in to the penalty area, wherean Aurora attacker tapped the ball inoff of a header toward goal. The fourthgoal came on a corner kick that wascleared out of the area. As the Maroondefenders pulled out, Aurora sent theball back into the penalty area, creat¬ing the opportunity for their goal.The fifth goal occurred when Floresattempted to clear a ball out of the box.The ball hit an Aurora player’s knee,and keeper Joe Mario could not recov¬er to stop the redirectioned ball intime. And the final goal scored on a re¬bound after Mario made the initial stopon a three-man breakaway.Most players agreed that Aurora’stwo quick goals destroyed theMaroons’ game. Freshman ErnestFielder said that “I don’t want to takeanything away from them. They werea good team, but we just let down.”Coach DeSilva agreed. “We wereleading 1-0 at the half. After their goalswe went kind of flat, but we played ahell of a game up until that time.”12—The Chicago Maroon—Friday. November 4 1983 Maroon blockers stuff Concordia spike in losing cause Tuesday.Harriers head for IowaBy Jane LookThe University of Chicago women’scross country team travels to Coe Col¬lege in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, today toparticipate in the Midwest AthleticConference Cross Country Champion¬ships Saturday.The conference championship willhighlight the team’s first season as avarsity sport. Despite a small turnoutfor this year’s pilot season, the runnershave shown steady improvement andhave made a respectable showing in allof their meets.Coaching the newly formed team isfirst-year coach Wendy Sood. Sood,who formerly coached track and crosscountry at Concordia College, said, “Ifeel we have had a successful start toChicago’s cross country program de¬spite the small team size. Each meetwas a stepping stone toward the bigmeets, and it will be interesting to seehow we fare.”The team consists of a blend of youthand experience. Leading the team inexperience are fourth-year students Sue Snow and Trish Wong. Also addingexperience are Ann Reed and AnneRader, both returning runners. Round¬ing out the team is first-year studentRachel Vinkey, who has consistentlyrun the fastest times of the team dur¬ing the season.As the team geared for conferenceby hosting the University of ChicagoInvitational last weekend at Washing¬ton Park, each member of the team re¬sponded by posting her fastest time ofthe season. Vinkey led Chicago with atime of 19:52 for the three-mile courseand placed tenth. Reed posted a time of20:35 and Wong followed with a time of21:43. Reed finished in sixteenth placeand Wong came in eighteenth. Snowran a 22:04 and Rader completed thecourse in 23:46.Thus after a full season of daily prac¬tices and weekend meets, the team isready for conference. The team en¬countered many diverse race coursesthis year, ranging from log jumps tomiserable weather, and should be pre¬pared for whatever challenges the con¬ference course can offer.The Chicago Maroonannounces aBIG MEETING!All staff writers and interestedprospectives are invited to attend.SUNDAYNovember 6,19838 p.m. • Ida Noyes Hall • Room 303Wm-W*-1 spoitssThe Third String—If you were surprised by the relatively close scoreof this weekend’s Maroon football game, then youwere certainly not alone. Ron Roberts, Lawrencehead coach, seemed very impressed with the show¬ing of the Maroons, even going so far as to call them“a good ball club.”“Mick’s done a real nice job,” said Roberts, ad¬ding that the Maroons “are still young.” Lawrence,on the other hand, is a team dominated by upper¬classmen, with very few freshman starters.This makes the Maroon performance even moreimpressive. A freshman-oriented squad playing aproven conference power with a lot of experience to anear standoff, losing by only eight points, and play¬ing well throughout the contest. This is truly one ofthe finest examples this season of the strides beingmade in the University of Chicago football program.If you had been in the stands this weekend, you prob¬ably would have concluded that the game was playedby two excellent teams, with Lawrence just a fewpoints better that day. You certainly couldn’t haveguessed that the Maroons record shows only onewin.So why are the Chicago Maroons still 1-7 at thispoint? According to Lawrence’s Roberts, theMaroons still have some work left to do, especially inthe area of attitude — they “still have to overcomethe losing tradition of the school.” One need only lookat campus-wide reaction to this weekend’s game tosee this losing tradition in action: “What! NO!!You’re kidding... are you SERIOUS?” That was thereaction most students seemed to have upon hearingthat their school was up 19-0 on Lawrence. It’s prob¬lems like these which Roberts feels still have to behurled before Chicago can become a real con¬tender.Mick Ewing, Chicago head coach, has stressed thisall season long. “Chicago just isn’t supposed to winfootball games,” he said in pointing to the rampantproblem of attitude in the Maroon football program.Ewing and his Maroon charges have had to battlethis negativism throughout the season, from the firstgame victory against Grinnell right up to this week¬end’s loss to the Vikings. However, the Maroon men¬tor was quick to point out that games like this lastone are “definitely a positive factor for us’ in tryingto overcome this troublesome attitude.On the team itself, Ewing believes that the attitudehas changed substantially. “They are starting to be¬lieve in themselves more now,” he noted. “They nowbelieve they go out and play to see who’s better,which I don’t think they were doing earlier thisyear,” he said, adding that “they (the Maroons) arecapable of playing with the best the league has tooffer.”And that last sentiment is surely reflected in thismost recent contest. Against a solid Lawrence de¬fense, the Maroons piled up 124 yards on the groundand another 86 yards passing. But more important,Chicago was able to move the football very efficient¬ly, even from deep in their own territory, which hasbeen a rough spot in the Maroon offense so far.The defense played a pretty decent game also, as long as the ball wasn’t airborne. The Maroons limit¬ed the Lawrence rushing attack, which has beenamong the best in the league in past years, to a mere78 yards, permitting less than two yards per carry.In fact Lawrence only had one carry all day long thatwas over ten yards (a 15-yard burst by Alan Timm).Passing, however, was quite another story. In thesecond half, “they found out they could pass,” saidEwing, when asked why their offense seemed so pow¬erful after intermission. Actually the last drive of thefirst half was probably the point at which Lawrencediscovered the air lanes were open. In that drive theywent 70 yards in less than four minutes, gainingmostt of the yardage through the air. By the day’send, Lawrence quarterback R. J. Roberts (son ofcoach Roberts) had picked apart the Chicago secon¬dary to the tune of 265 yards, with 16 of 25 completeand one interception.This week’s players of the week have been an¬nounced, and they are as follows: Hit of the Week:John Steedman, Special Teams Player: Bucky Dent,Def. Back: Mike Novak, Def. Linebacker: DaveBaker, Def. Lineman: Greg Shinall, Off. Back:Bruce Montella, Off. Receiver: Russ Johannsen, Off.Lineman: Tom Lee.The season finale for the Maroons is the weekend’scontest with Principia, a team from the St. Louisarea. Ewing has described Principia as “a fineschool with fine people — it’s a very close knitteam.” They are coming off a 42-20 loss this pastweekend to Southwest Memphis, and enter the gamewith a 3-4 slate. Principia and Chicago only have onecommon opponent — Washington University —which beat the Maroons, 10-0. Principia edged WU ona late field goal, 17-14.Principia’s offense is quite different from whatChicago has been used to seeing so far. And if pasthistory holds true, the Maroon defense should be upfor a big game, since Principia will be runningagainst a Maroon strength — defense against the op¬tion. “U of C plays very well against the option,” ac¬cording to Ewing, and options comprise the corner¬stone of the Principia offense. “Very few teams arestill pure option clubs anymore, but they run it agreat deal,” said Ewing.Surprisingly, the St. Louis squad also like to throwoff of the option. And when they go to the air tomor¬row, the ball will have a little different spin thanusual, as the Principia signal-caller is a southpaw.But if the Maroons can shut down the option, theirlefty QB may not get a chance to throw out of thatformation very often.And if the defense can shut down the Principia at¬tack, the key matchup will be the Maroon offense,including their rejuvenated ground game, againstthe 50 off-set defense of the Missouri team. As of thewriting the Maroon backfield is healthy and shouldbe ready for Saturday’s game. If the offense plays aswell as it did against Lawrence, it should have no tro¬uble putting points on the board.Tomorrow’s game, at Stagg Field, begins at 1:30,and will be the final contest of the 1983 campaign.The Maroons will be out to notch their second win of the season, and out to make Ewing’s prediction cometrue: “I feel we will beat them.”The Sporting News has named White Sox outfielderRon Kittle American League Rookie-of-the-Year. anunderstandable move considering King Kong Kittle’sfirst-year numbers (35 home runs, 100 RBI). Unfor¬tunately, offensive statistics and the team you playfor seem to form the only basis for such selections,and in the shuffle a player such as Julio Franco re¬ceives no mention. Who is Julio Franco, you ask?Franco plays shortstop for the Cleveland Indians,as he arrived as one of the five players that the Tribereceive in exchange for the legendary Von Hayes.While Kittled slugged balls toward the ComiskeyPark roof and wandered aimlessly in left field (theeasiest defensive position in baseball), Francoplayed with what Boston Globe columnist PeterGammons called “the range of the state of Nebras¬ka” at shortshop, and sto)le 35 bases. In addition,Franco hit ninth for most of the season, but still man¬aged to produce more runs that Kittle (144 to 139)and hit 21 points higher (.274 to .254). Even thoughKittle had 35 roundtrippers (two shy of the major-league rookie record) and Franco had just eight,they had almost the same number of total bases. Wewon’t even mention that Kittle whiffed 150 times.So essentially we have a more potent offensiveplayer who’s faster, plays much better defense at amuch more demanding position, but has only onething wrong with him that kept him from winning anaward he deserved: he plays in Cleveland.* * *The U of C soccer team finished second this year inthe Midwest Conference North Division, with a 4-1 re¬cord. Lake Forest took the North Division title, andthen slipped by Grinnell in the championship game,2-0, in overtime... rugby plays at home for the nexttwo weekends at North Field. Chicago’s team comesoff an impressive 1982-83 campaign which saw themdefeat national powers such as Ohio State on route toa berth in the NCAA Final Four as the Midwest Re¬gion representative.... If you think that the possibili¬ty of turning around Chicago’s losing football tradi¬tion is unlikely, take a look at the job Lawrencecoach Ron Roberts did with the Vikings program.When he arrived 17 years ago he began, slowly, topiece together a national power in Division III col¬lege football, by successful recruiting and by keepinghis players around all four seasons. It didn’t takeLawrence long to become established, and with an¬other successful year of recruiting. Mick Ewingcould have Chicago improved beyond recognition ina short time... and finally, the IM football playoffsstart this week. For information on standings in indi¬vidual sports and team sports as well, keep an eye onthe IM bulletin boards on the second floor of IdaNoyes, or the “Off the IM wire” column in each Tues¬day’s Maroon.* * *We’ll go with three trivia questions this week...first: name the only original NFL team that hasnever changed its location or its nickname.... sec¬ond: name the only NFL quarterback that alsoplayed on a College W’orld Series championship base¬ball team... and the clincher: name the only foursports that you win not by going forward, but by-going backward.Mark BlockerFrank LubyHoopsters optimisticBy Geoff SherryThe University of Chicago women’sbasketball team, coming off a 15-6 re¬cord last year, will kick off the seasonNov. 21 at Wheaton College. Nothingless than optimistic, Coach Diann Nes-tel will boast 10 returning letter win¬ners on this year’s squad.With an ’82-’83 conference record of9-3, the Maroons placed third behindCoe and Cornell. Coach Nestel said,“This year’s race should feature thesame teams, with the possible additionof St. Norbert’s.” The conference con¬sists of two divisions, with the winnerof each division meeting for the cham¬pionship. “We are in the west divisionwith St. Norbert’s, while Coe and Cor¬nell are both in the east. Although all ofthe teams will be competitive, it shouldcome down to those four,” said Nes¬tel.This year’s squad resembles a pageout of the U of C record book. Six of theeight major school records in women’sbasketball are held by members of thisyear’s squad. Sophomore GretchenGates has a hand in five. The game andseason records in most points and fieldgoal percentage, along with seasonalrecords in scoring average and re¬bounds belong to Gates. The power¬house U of C center was fifth among Di¬vision III leaders in field goalpercentage, popping at a 54.8 percentclip, while also bagging the 17th spot inscoring with a 21.8 point average, and the 14th spot in rebounds with 13.6swipes per game. Gates will be aidedat center by senior Helen Straus, whoholds the single game record in re¬bounding with 26 against WashingtonUniversity in 1981.In her third year, forward WendyPietrzak gives meaning to the wordversatility. Claiming honors across theboard, Pietrzak was second among theMaroons last year in rebounds and as¬sists, while copping the third spot inpoints per game. Senior Dana Howdrounds out the hall-of-fame list with thegame and season records in most as¬sists under her belt. Howd paced theMaroons with 78 assists last year,averaging 3.9 points per game.On the court, the Maroons will defin¬itely resemble the 15-6 team of a yearago, not only by he faces, but by theirstyle of play. Coach Nestel said, “Ouroffense will be similar to last year’s,with a point guard and designatedpoint and perimeter players.” Withshades of Bobby Knight, former Hoo-sier Nestel said, “although most teamsare switching to a zone, we wll stick toour aggressive player-to-player de¬fense.”Entering into a season where “noth¬ing more than one loss” will probablywin the division, Coach Nestel sports astrong, experienced, and optimisticball club. Again, the U of C women’sbasketball team opens its season Nov.21 at Wheaton College. PHOTO BY ARA JELALIANSports CalendarFootball — Saturday, Nov. 5, vs. Principia College, at Stagg Field. 1:30 p mWomen’s Cross Country — Saturday, Nov. 5, at Midwest Conference champi¬onships, Cedar Rapids, Iowa.Men’s Cross Country — Sunday, Nov. 6, UCTC Open Four-Mile Run, W ashing-ton Park, 11 a.m.The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4, 1983—13VIEWPOINTSNukescontinued from page fivehigh-level waste. Furthermore, in 1977the federal government waas forced toadmit that it could not account for ap¬proximately 8000 pounds of plutonium,with more than a ton missing from theHanford site. Subsequently, the peoplein charge at the Hanford Nuclear Res¬ervation admitted that it had been mis¬takenly poured into the soil along withthe rest of the waste.In 1977, Dr. Thomas Mancuso madepublic the results of his study on themortality of workers in federal atomicprograms at this facility. He demon¬strated a high degree of correlation be¬tween radiation exposure and deathrates from cancer. More importantly,he found this correlation of evidence it¬self at an average exposure of muchless than the 5 REM per year standarddeemed acceptable for atomic workersby the federal government. Dr. Mancu¬so had his federal research grant im¬mediately rescinded. Dr. ErnestSternglass (PhD) and Dr. John Gof-man (MD, PhD) are the authors of stu¬dies which measured the cancer andleukemia rates in populations livingnear commercial nuclear reactors andfound cancer rates (especially amongchildren whose rapidly dividing cellsare more susceptible to ingested car¬cinogens) to have increased thirty per¬cent since the installation of the nukes.All commercial nukes routinely emitradioactive gases into the atmopshere.Plutonium is an alpha-emitter and hasa half-life of 24,400 years which meansthat it remains highly poisonous for atleast half a million years. The iron-likeproperties of his reactor waste permitit to cross the highly selective placen¬tal barrier and reach the developingfetus. Once in the body, plutonium iscombined with iron-transporting pro¬teins in the blood and conveyed to ironstorage cells in the liver and bone mar¬row. Here it irradiates the nearby cellsinducing liver and bone cancer and leu¬kemia. Plutonium is concentrated inthe fatty tissue that surrounds the tes¬ticles nd M'iec where it inevitablybecomes the cause of genetic muta¬tions which are passed onto future gen-Israelcontinued from page fivethe connection between American fi¬nancial support — both governmentaland private — and the belligerence ofIsrael’s relations with its neighbors, tosay nothing of the Palestinians underoccupation.Peace activists also pointed outIsrael’s far-flung adventures in recentyears: the arming of Honduras; thelending of money to the US to be used toprop up the El Salvador regime; thearming and training of the Guatema¬lan army, which is now exterminatingits Indian population; and the armingof Argentina, which has a semi-officialstate policy of anti-Semitism. Andmany Israelis are sickened by the closeties which have sprung up betweenIsrael and South Africa, particularly inweapons technology, both nuclear andconventional. To really understand thecloseness of these relations, The Jeru¬salem Post often carries large ads forvacations to South Africa.The increasingly brutal occupationof the West Bank and Gaza has madeits mark on the domestic Israeli soci¬ety, peace activists contend, pointingto the hand grenade murder of EmilGrunzweig in February. Grunzweig, aPeace Now activist, was in a protestwhich called for Ariel Sharon’s resig¬nation. There is no serious question inIsrael about who, generally speaking,killed Grunzweig; that the otherwiseefficient security service has failed tomake any discernible progress in thecase worries many peace activists.I don’t have any data which would in¬dicate this conclusively, but if a studywere done of Israeli society, I thinkthat the last few years would show anincrease in crimes of violence in gener¬al. and particularly those againstwomen. The point is that violence andintolerance as a way of life recognizeno borders. erations. Everyone in the NorthernHemisphere (three quarters of theworld’s population) has plutonium al¬ready inside their bodies as a result ofatmospheric bomb-testing done in thetwo decades following the creation ofthe A-bomb. Everyone.Chicago is ringed by nuclear reac¬tors built by Commonwealth Edisonand paid for with the record rate in¬creases granted to them in the last fewyears by the Commerce Commission.It is a matter of public record that thenew rate increases granted to utilitiesall over the country are to pay for theirnuclear construction programs whichhave exceeded the most far-reachingupper limits in cost overruns. Recent¬ly, when residents of Harrisburg,Pennsylvania, found out at a publicmeeting that Metropolitan Edison wasplanning to make the consumers liablefor the costs of the disaster at ThreeMile Island (at least 200 million dol¬lars) one of them, the local high schoolfootball coach, shouted this was “likethe Germans asking the survivors ofthe Holocaust to pay for a rest home forSS officers.” His point, I think, is veryclear and so the connections made be¬tween powerful interests in any histori¬cal framework and those of the peoplewho are dominated and misled bythem.Nuclear power is a capital-intensiveenterprise. The myth that the industrycreates a lot of jobs seems to havetaken hold in this country where somuch capital has been invested in nu¬clear energy. Assumptions like theseare the vestiges of the nineteenth cen¬tury belief that all industrial progresswas beneficial to people, and thus to so¬ciety. If one bothers to look into thisaspect of the nuclear industry with anyseriousness it becomes apparent that,while some ordinary construction la¬borers are hired, the only non-skilledpositions available in the long run arethose of armed security personnel.In contrast to the hard energy path ofnuclear power, alternative energysources present a sane, labor-intensiveapproach to meeting global energyneeds. Solar, wind and geothermalpower are very viable energy optionswhich run counter to the economictrend of centralizng all the control in afew’ hands. They also have no connec-Which brings us back to the un¬derwriting of violence as a staple ofstate policy. There is a continual de¬bate within the American Jewish com¬munity about the efficacy and moralityof withholding funds from Israel. Thegeneral trend, unfortunately, has beento continue to finance state violence.And the opinion pages of the Israelipress often carry sarcastic referencesto “our rich uncles across the Atlan¬tic.”I do not understand the dilemma ofAmerica Jews, and I believe they feelthey are helping Israel with their con¬tribution. However, one must look atthe results as well as the intentions ofan act, and I can do no more than ex¬hort American Jews to go to Israel andthe occupied territories as soon as pos¬sible. And please, don’t stay in the TelAviv Hilton: go to Nazareth, the larg¬est Arab city in Israel. Compare Na¬zareth to Nazareth Elite, the Jewishsettlement which looms over Na¬zareth: compare the streets, the shops,the cars, and the houses of those twocities. Then to go Hebron and seeKiryat Arba, the Jewish settlementoutside the Arab city of Hebron. Lookat the Jewish settlement in the heart ofHebron: it is surrounded by barbedwire, with a machine gun nest on theroof. The entrance is guarded by Israe¬li soldiers. It is a ghetto, and it is a har¬binger of things to come.Asked about Nazism and the destruc¬tion of European Jewry, a Germanonce said, “It’s not that we didn’tknow, but in those years it was betternot to know.” American Jews, whetherthey realize it or not, have a decisivesay in Israeli politics; however, thelever is not rhetorical, it is financial.And it is time it was used, before it’stoo late for both Israelis and Palestin¬ians.John Egan is a graduate student inpolitical science, and recently returnedfrom a six-week trip to Israel and theWest Bank. tions with the war industry. A solarpower program would be a communi¬ty-based accessible power source. Halfthe money used to build a solar instal¬lation is used to pay the wages ofworkers. No crippling rate hikes arenecessary. Unfortunately, the federalgovernment had never allocated anysubstantial amount of money to the re¬search and development of alternativeenergies. In fact, the Reagan adminis¬tration redirected all the money ear¬marked for soft energy research intonuclear power — and then some. Thepolitical and economic links betweenthe federal government and the nu¬clear industry are tightly forged. Nu¬clear Power has been subsidized by thegovernment since the inception of theManhattan Project in 1941. Indeed, theUS government came up with the in¬surance plan for the fledgling nuclearindustry. When the insurance industrybalked at providing insurance for nu-Percycontinued from page onePercy claimed that “The president toldeverything he knew,” and that it wouldhave been “much more dramatic if heknew then what he knows now.” Ac¬cording to Percy, the “President sim¬ply took out an insurance policy.” As tothe controversy over the near-total re¬striction of press coverage of the inva¬sion, he said that “1 was disturbed andI intervened on several cases...and in¬sisted...” but went on to say that na¬tional security interests sometimes re¬quire control and that the “press mustaccept the fact that sometimes (con¬trol) is necessary...”The question of Lebanon was alsoraised. Percy noted that the “Intelli¬gence Committee is having an investi¬gation” concerning the security ofAmerican forces in Lebanon. US pre¬sence arises out of a “necessity ofkeeping some level of stability.” and“What we’re trying to do is bring peaceto the Middle East.”Percy then spoke in favor of tradewith the Soviet Union “because it’s toour advantage to do so. We can sell 46million tons of grain...and get backgold...(This) puts money right back inthe pocket of the taxpayer.”As he was leaving the senator wasagain asked about Grenada. With evi¬dent impatience, he insisted that US in¬tervention had been invited by the gov¬ernor of the island and the Caribbeannations. When asked if he felt it was aviolation of international law, Percyreplied negatively, and added that hehad asked Deputy Secretary of StateKenneth Dam the same question andwas satisifed with the answer.Harrison Salisbury, a former NewYork Times correspondent and orize-“The Reagan State and the ‘GenderGap’ ” will be the subject of a lectureby Zillah Eisenstein, professor of politi¬cal science at Ithaca College, Mondayat 4 p.m. in Swift Lecture Hall. A recep¬tion will follow in Harper 284.Eisenstein’s talk is the third of a four-part fall lecture series, “American Pol¬itics and Social Policy in the ’80s,” andis co-sponsored by the Forum for Fe¬minist Scholarship.Eisenstein, a prominent feministtheorist, is the author of the forthcom¬ing Feminism and Crisis in LiberalAmerica. Her earlier book, The Radi¬cal Future of Liberal Feminism, pub¬lished in 1981, is the first systematicstudy of the theory of liberal feminism.In that work, Eisenstein examines therichness of liberalism’s contribution tofeminism while also analyzing the con¬tradictory relationship between liber¬alism and feminism.In her lecture she will account for thehistory of the gender gap as not begin¬ning, as media reports suggest, in the1980 presidential election — the firstelection in which women voted in ap¬preciable numbers differently frommen. Rather, she will consider thegender gap as partly a reaction ofwomen to changes occurring within thefamily structure.Financial support for the programhas been provided by the followinggroups: Center for the Study of Indus¬trial Societies, Committee on Public clear reactors the government passedthe Price-Anderson Act which in effect,makes the taxpayers liable for thecosts of a commercial reactor acci¬dent.I have presented here just a partialglimpse into the myriad problems as¬sociated with both the civilian and mili¬tary branches of the nuclear industry.This incompleteness is only because ofspace limitations and I would welcomefurther debate and illumination of thissubject in the pages of the Maroon orelsewhere on campus. If there is no at¬tempt to explore honestly the hazardsof a technology which, even as I writethis, has the world at the precipice ofextinction, then we will all deserve itwhen the bombs go off or the reactorsexplode. This is no time for passive ac¬ceptance.Corinne Lally-Benedetto is a gradu¬ate student in the department of sociol¬ogy.Charles Percywinning author, also answered a fewquestions after speaking on one of thepanels at the conference, with reac¬tions somewhat different from those ofPercy.He termed the US invasion of Gren¬ada “abominable and ridiculous.” Asto Lebanon, “I don’t know what we’redoing, we need a policy. It’s terriblydangerous. I don’t see a contribution topeace...The Middle East is and hasbeen the most dangerous (area) in theworld and is more so now...I can’t seeany contribution to stability.”Asked whether US activities such asthe invasion of Grenada contribute toSoviet paranoia, Salisbury replied thatthe “paranoia would be there but it’salso our allies who are worried (since)we don’t have any policy.”Does he consider the stifling of thepress in Grenada dangerous? “Dan¬gerous! It’s incredible.”Policy Study, Department of PoliticalScience, Forum for Liberal Learning,Public Policy Studies in the College,and the Women’s Board of the Univer¬sity of Chicago.Grenadacontinued from page fourdressed many of the more concreteissues surrounding the invasion. Hetried in his words, to “roll back the roll¬ing lie” created by the administrationto legitimate the invasion. For in¬stance, he pointed out that the WhiteHouse has conceded that the airport onthe island was never closed to charterflights. Therefore, he said, the Ameri¬can students were not “held hostage.”The alleged Cuban troops, he said, aremerely construction workers who hadprobably been trained, like mostCubans, in popular militias. The con¬troversial airstrip (where he does hisbirdwatching when on the island) is, hesaid, nothing that most of the localtourist islands do not already have.Blaut said he believes that the invasionis “still going on”; that is, that UStroops occupy only five percent of theisalnd and that with enough resistanceby the Grenadian people, the Americanpeople, and international organiza¬tions, the troops could be forced to pullout, leaving the Grenadians free tochoose their own government.The Reagan State and the Gender Gap14—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4, 1983CLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGClassified advertising in the Chicago Maroon is$2 for the first line and $1 for each additionalline. Lines are 45 characters long INCLUDINGspaces and punctuation. Special headings are20 character lines at $2 per line. Ads are not ac¬cepted over the phone, and they must be paidin advance. Submit all ads in person or by mailto The Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60037 ATTN: Classified Ads. Ouroffice is in Ida Noyes Rm. 304. Deadlines:Wednesday noon for the Friday issue, Fridaynoon for the Tuesday issue. Absolutely no ex¬ceptions will be made! In case of errors forwhich the Maroon is responsible, adjustmentswill be made or corrections run only if thebusiness office is notified WITHIN ONECALENDAR WEEK of the original publica¬tion. The Maroon is not liable for any errors.SPACEFOR RENTTwo Bedrm. 1 bath condominiums completelyremodeled. Floors refinished. Some apts. withsunporch. Rent $550. For inspection contactMr. Wardian 493-2525.FOR RENTThree Bedrm, 2 bath condominium on HydePark Blvd. In excellent condition. Close toUniversity & public transportation. Rent $750& security Deposit. Contact Mr. Wardian 493-2525.Female rmmate wanted to share spacious, It2br apt. Convenient loc; $205 752-1512 eves.Female wanted to share beautiful spacious 2-bedroom apt on Hyde Park Blvd btwn 54&55thfor $225 per month includes heat only grad stu¬dent or working women call 288-2622 btwn 10A& 10P available immed.Furnished sublet Jan-March 1984 . 56th & Dor¬chester. 1 bdrm. Call 263-2610days.Rmmte wmtd to share 3bdrm apt. Rm hasGREAT LAKE VIEW. $122/mth + utl. Non-smknggrad pref Available now. Call 538-1962Spacious apt. at 5455 S. Blackstone. $425/mo.incl. gas & utility. Near coop, on B bus route.Call 241-5469 6pm-10pm.Room in Sunny Apt-Nonsmoker CongenialKimbark/57th $160 mo John 684-5498 (Juan Lcall back)1>/2 s 2V? Studios newly decorated carpetedstove & refrig laundry fac All Utilities Included5140 S. Woodlawn 493-6250E Hyde Pk Lg 1 Bd 350 493 217953RD AND HYDE PARK BLVDFour room apartment for rent.$300/month. On UC Bus route.Call Wilma Senser, 667-6666 (days)Female roommate to share large, modern 2bedroom/2 bath apt at 5050 S. Lake Shore. 947-0332 till 10pm.FOR SALEFree Film!!!Receive One Roll of Film Freewith every color Negative FilmPrinted and Processed atModel Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700OlympusXA with Flash $139.95Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700TDK SA 90 Tapes 10 for $29.90. Model Camera1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700.73 Pontiac Catalina, automatic, air, powersteering & brakes, very reliable, $795. Call 241-7810 after 6 pm or weekend.Used Nikon Ftn with Motor Drive $499.00.Model Camera 1342 E. 55th St. 493 6700Multi family MOVING SALE! YARD SALE!Alley next to 5715 Kimbark, 9:30-1:30 Sat., Nov.5. Raindate. 9:30-1:30 Sun., Nov. 6. Toys, sled,household items, furniture, skis, children's andadults' clothing, fabric, games, carseat, books,aquarium, T.V. typewriter, records, recordplayer, AND MUCH MORE.Good qual. gold RUG 10x12 $30. Blocks andboards. Karen H. 752 5033 W. 996 4472 or 9030Dodge Van for sale. Slant six (cylinder). 15-20mpg. With ladder rack. Good engine. GoodTransmission. Good Tires. $895. Bill 493-9122PEOPLE WANTEDPeople needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962 8859.Healthy Non-smoking paid volunteers soughtfor research into the common cold. Call 791 -3713.New parents needed for study of how couplesor singles cope with child rearing and dualcareers. Grad students and faculty wanted forresearch inferview(s). A support group isavailable for participants. Call Ms. Strawderat Michael Reese Hospital, Psychiatry 791-3861 63.Healthy non smoking paid volunteers withonset of common cold within prior 24 hourssought for research project. Call 791-3713.We need one person with an interest in tun CLASSIFIEDSdraising to do clerical work for us 15/hours perweek for the rest of the year. $4.50/hour Pleasecall 753-0875 during business hours.COFFEE SHOP MGR on campus M-F Morn¬ings ex pref. 962-9458OFFICE ASSISTANT. 30 hours +. Officeduties focus on coordination of, planning, andimplementing innovative office procedures.Office staff numbers up to 7 or 8. Many pro¬jects, some international. Typing 50+. $5-7hourly. Send resumes to Office Assistant, 6048South Ingleside, Apt. mi, Chicago, lllinoiu60637. (241-6271 evenings only).Babysitter for 3-year-old & 1-mo-girls in ourhome, occasional eves, and/or weekenddaytime hrs. 962-1632 or 955 2321.Computer Programmer15-20 hrs/wk. SAS and SPSS skills. 2 years ex¬perience, near north. P. Weil 943-0544Student wanted to do odd jobs around our con¬dominium on regular basis. Some heavy lif¬ting. 962-1632 or 955-2321.Subjects needed for psych experiments ondecision-making $3.50/40 min Call 962-6026SERVICESJUDITH TYPES - and has a memory. Phone955-4417.JAMES BONE, editor-typist, 363-0522.TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Reasonable 6846882.PASSPORT photos while you wait. On Cam¬pus. Other photo services available. 962-6263.ENROLL NOW. Thai and Chinese cookingclasses. Bring appetite & enthusiasm. Ex¬perienced ter.Wendy Gerick 538 1324CUSTOM CATERING. Let me create theunusual fc you. Far Eastern & Europeanspecialties.Wendy Gerick - 538-1324MOVING AND HAULING. Discount prices tostaft and students from $12/hour with van, orhelpers for trucks. Free cartons delivered N/Cpacking and loading services. Many other ser¬vices. References BILL 493-9122.Childcare available two or three days a weekin warm, stimulating home setting near U of C.Older infant or toddler welcome. 684-2820NEEDATYPIST?Excellent work-Reasonable Rates. Tel. 536-7167PRECISION PLUS TYPING Fast service atreasonable rates includes editing. 324-1660AnytimeTYPIST - Experienced Secretary Types AllMaterial - Thesis, Dissertations, Tables, etc.on IBM Selec. 11. Grammar Corrected 667-8657.Typing I BM Electronic 50. Call 752 5945.Learn Spanish with an experienced native ofColumbia. Tuforing especially helpful, in¬cluding text, tapes, and individual instruction.Reasonable rates. For more info, call 324-3686.PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Call Barbara. 9553175.Typing. Term papers, theses, etc. IBM Correc¬ting Selectric. All projects welcome. 791-1647.Italian language lessons by native speaker.Degree in language pedagogy from Universitydt Venice. 363-7111ARCHITECTURAL QUALITY REMODELLING Reliable, neat, guaranteed on-time completion. Reterences available. LOSETH CON¬STRUCTION CO. 363 2202.SCENESWRITERS'WORKSHOP 752 8377Crossroads Openhouse Sunday Nov 6 at 3:30pm. Live music, wine & cheese, good company.Learn about Crossroads and meet the council& staff.AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL meets atCrossroads (5621 Blackstone) on Monday, Nov 7 at 7:15pmAre you an artisan working in stained glass orceramics? HYDE PARK ARTISANA offersyou fhe chance to display and sell work. We area cooperative gallery at 57th and Woodlawn inthe Unitarian Church. We also welcome allother visual arts and crafts. All art you submitwill be reviewed. For details call AlbertaSmith Johnson at 842-0706 or Jill Cleary at 935-1708.PERSONALSYou want The King? You got him. The House ofElvis is back—in 3-D.Ride the new wave with Surfin' Herb Silver-man Saturdays at 3am on WHPKWAITERS & WAITRESSESMellow Yellow is looking for high energy,business minded people for our busy & growingresfauranf. We need you to be full fime, ex¬perienced, & have checkable references. Apply1508 E. 53rd St. Mon-Frl 9-11am Ellen orElizabeth.UNIV PARKFOR RENTStudio top floor north vu drapes/carpets $385w/heat + wtr can furnished Tom 962-1210 963-1398 Avail Jan 1ESCAPE FROMHYDE PKSee Monfreal, New York, New England! Jointhe Debating Society. Meeting Wed & Sun 7pmin INH. All grad & UG welcome. Run-off forBrown tournament Sun. Nov 13. Contact us forinfo.ATTENTION:SPEAKERSThe Debating Society is holding a run-off SunNov 13 to qualify teams for the Brown tourna¬ment. All interested grad & UG students areurged to contact the Society in INH or attendSun & Wed sessions at INH at 7pm by Nov 9.LONELY OR UPSET?If something is bothering you and you want totalk, the hotline is willing to listen. You cantalk to us between 7pm and 7am, on any day,even Sunday. Our number is 753-1777RESEARCH SUBJECTSNEEDEDEarn $215-260 for learning to discriminate onedrug from another. Minimum time required.No experimental drugs involved. Must be bet¬ween 21 and 35 and in good health. For more in¬formation. Call 962-1536 weekdays between10:30 and 3:00. (This is the correct number - ifyou have trouble getting through keep trying.)COLLEGE BOWLUniversity of Chicago Intramural Tourna¬ment. Nov. 12-13 — Law School. Sign up nowthru Nov. 9 in Ida Noyes Hall Room 210. Questions should be addressed to Mike Day — 684-8217TABLE TENNISInterested in joining Table Tennis Club? CallRich Sussman, 951-6056 or leave note in GSBmailbox.JANE AUSTENCritical Forum presents "Two views of FannyPrice: an exchange of Austen's MansfieldPark" Papers by Sarah Touhey and MollieSandock, panel and audience discussion.Refreshments. Everyone welcome. Thurs. Nov10, 8:00pm, Wieboldt408.DIRECTORS WANTEDConcrete Gothic Theater is looking for peoplewho are interested in directing during eitherwinter or spring quarter. You need not have aplay in mind simply a desire to direct in¬terested call CGT at 363-5185.FICTION WRITINGUnique/intense method releases yr creativeenergy. 1st session free. Sat noon. Call ShouriDaniels, 667 0673. $150 for 50 hrs.DR. M. R. MASLOVOPTOMETRIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPESCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100V. ilIttK**—*(A»oc«fan \Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 AM.-4:30 PM.Monday thru Friday CHEERLEADINGTRYOUTSAll Welcome! Clinic Tues, Nov 8 4pm and Wed,Nov 9 6:30pm Tryouts on Fri, Nov 11 3pm HCFMulti-Purpose Room For more info call Laurelatph: 947 0036TAIWANESESTUDENTSLecture by Prof. Wu on Taiwanese Studentsand Asian Community Development, Nov 610AM at 1-House. All Students Welcomed.Sponsored by SGFC.Studybreak-Meeting for Taiwanese StudentsOrganization at 7:30-8:30 Nov 9 Ida Noyes 3rdFI.THERAPY OFFEREDJanet Reibstein PhD. & Michele Scheinkman,acsw, are psychotherapists both experiencedin working with undergraduate and graduatestudents, as well as other members ofacademic communifies. We each can offersome therapy hours in Hyde Park. PhoneJanet Reibstein at 324-2588 or MicheleScheinkman at 363-8578GAY? LESBIAN?GALA holds a coffeehouse every Tues 9pm at5446 S Kimbark. Conversation, old/newfriends, (and food) in a warm unpressured set¬ting. All are welcome.CREDIT UNIONThe USFCU is now taking applications fortellers. Qualified students contact BobNesselreth at 753-2242 (ext. 1612) at Pierce.Deadline in Nov. 18.PARTY TONITE!SGAC presents Mike Conte's DANCETERICAtonite 9pm to midnight, 3rd floor Ida Noyes.If's FREE! Funded by SGFC.LIKE TO PERFORM?Save Fridays for Ida Noyes' 3rd floor and callStudent Music at 281-8958LONELY OR UPSET?If something is bothering you and you want totalk about it, the hotline is willing to listen. Youcan talk to us between 7pm and 7am, on anyday, even Sunday . Our number is 753-1117.DANCETERICA...A student owned and operated professionalD.J. and party service is, tor a limited time, of¬fering to the University it's Disk-Jockey ser¬vice at less than half fhe regular rate. For only$99 you can heat four hours of your favoritesongs played over a $5,000 sound system! Forreferences or more information, please callMike Conte at 241-6438.COMING 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.BAGELS &LOXCome to Hillel's BAGELS AND LOX BRUNCHES for the best food, the best conversation,and the best prices in town! $1.75 per sand¬wich. Every Sunday 11:00 am to 1:00 pm atHillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn.DOES YOUR MINDMATTER?It does to us. Right and left-handed peopleneeded for paid participation in studies onright-left brain function. Call 962-88469-5 M-F.FOLK DANCECONCERTCome see spectacular International dancing atUC's 21st International Folk Dance Concert inMandel Hall, Sat Nov 5, 6 pm. The concertfeatures the amazing Flatley Studio Dancers,Macedonia's Atanas Kolarovski, the VictorClottley African Dance Ensemble, Ukraina,Natyakalallyam Ensemble, and others.Tickets $5, $4 students.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 materialBeware of bait advertisingEye ExaminationsFashion Eye WearContact LensesThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4, 1983—25As many of you must already know, The Seminary CoopBookstore has recently opened a second store in Hyde Park, 57thStreet Books, at 1301 East 57th Street. The store is open Mondaythrough Friday 8:00am-10:00pm, Saturday 10:00am-midnight,and Sunday noon until 6:00pm. Designed with the general readerin mind, 57th Street Books has several sections we have never hadspace for at the Seminary Coop: mysteries and science fiction,math and computer books. In addition there is more space for art,music, film, and children’s books — in fact, just more space ingeneral. We would like to invite everyone to stop by for severalspecial events this weekend and to see our handsome new loca¬tion. All of our members have accounts at both stores, though, asalways, one needn’t be a member to shop at either location.Today, Friday, from 4:00-6:00pm at 57thStreet Books, Natalie Zemon Davis, HenryCharles Lea Professor of History atPrinceton, will be autographing copies of hernew book, The Return of Martin Guerre.Sunday, November 6, from noon until 6:00pm, we will be holdingan opening celebration for 57th Street Books. Refreshments willbe served, and from 3:00-5:00pm Liza Dalby will be autographingcopies of her just published book, Geisha.The Seminary Coop, at our 5757 S. University location is onceagain expanding its hours. In addition to being open Mondaythrough Friday from 9:30am-6:00pm, and Saturdays from10:00am-5:00pm, we are now open Sundays from 12:00-5:00pm.?1 BOOKS k SEMINARYCO-OPBOOKSTOREWhere people who care about books come to find them26-The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 4, 1983