The Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 34 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1984 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 14, 1984U of C specialistsZonis expects no significant change ponder Soviet successionHale: ‘Chernenko lacks vision’By Ravi RajmaneClaiming the death of SovietPresident Yuri Andropovshould bring about no signifi¬cant change in Soviet foreignpolicy, Marvin Zonis spokeSunday at Woodward Court on“New Dimensions of War andPeace in the Middle East.”“There is no reason to ex¬pect anything dramatic in thechoosing of a new leader or inSoviet policy,” said Zonis as heexplained how recent develop¬ments in the Soviet Unioncould influence tensions in theMiddle East. With the ascen¬sion of Konstantin Chernenkointo the Soviet presidency, “weshould not expect a significantchange in Soviet foreign poli¬cy.” During the reigns of Leon¬id Brezhnev and Andropov,Chernenko was the ideologicalleader of the Central Commu¬nist Politburo, making himpredominant in the making ofdomestic and foreign policy.“If anything, we now expecta period of uncertainty,” in theSoviet Union, Zonis said. Headded that the Soviet govern¬ment will probably respond tothis “uncertainty” by “in¬creasing repression at homeand caution abroad.”Zonis said the Soviet Union iscurrently plagued with “eco¬nomic, demographic, and so¬cial-pressure problems” whichthreaten to kindle domesticstrife. Zonis said by the year2000, Central Asian Moslemswill outnumber White Rus¬sians in the USSR and overtwo-thirds of Soviet fightingforces will be comprised ofMoslems. Thus, he noted, theWhite Russian power-base isvery apprehensive of the risinginfluence of the Central Asiansand of the proliferating Isla¬mic Revolution.Regarding the arms race,Zonis said the Soviets’ “per¬ception is diametrically op¬posed to that of Americans.”In the Soviet Union there existsa feeling “that the US has notonly pursued the initiative buthas been the dominant force inthe world.” Such thought hasbeen fortified by numerous ex¬amples of supposed US mili¬tary-political supremacy suchas the recent deployment ofPershing missies in westernEurope, failure of the Sovietattempt to alter the West Ger¬man election, and the continu¬ing success of the mujadhins(Islamic freedom fighters) inAfghanistan and American-South African backed rebels inAngola. Zonis suggested that the So¬viets wished to regain worlddominance, which they felthad been achieved underBrezhnev, by the defeat ofRonald Reagan in this year’selection. In order to embarrassReagan by proving to theAmerican public the fallacy ofhis pro-military, anti-Sovietstance, the USSR is unlikely“to overtly provoke the US inany way” this year. Zonis didsay that the Soviets would likea chance at humiliating the USin a situation similar to the1962 Cuban missile crisis, inwhich Zonis argued the “USwas indeed humiliated.”Zonis cited the Iran-Iraq warand the “Lebanon embrolio”as the areas where the Sovietscould pursue such a plan.Exploring the possibility ofBy Cliff GrammichChicago police arrested Sat¬urday a man suspected of com¬mitting a rape Feb. 4 at the59th St. IC station. Police ar¬rested the youth after a stone¬throwing incident at 5331 S.Cornell Saturday evening.University security and citypolice appeared at the scene ofSaturday’s stone-throwing in¬ intervention in the Iran-Iraqwar by the US or USSR, Zonisexpressed surprise at the lon¬gevity of the Ayatollah Kho¬meini regime in Iran. Zonis ar¬gued Iran is not beholden to theUSSR, but rather, the twocountries are at odds. He saidhe could foresee “a major So¬viet initiative against Iran,”for Iran has expelled Commu¬nists and Soviet dignitaries,and has begun to train and mo¬bilize Afghan guerillas.Since “Iraq is winning everybattle,” Zonis said Iran “couldrespond to Iraqi victories bybombarding foreign (UAE,Kuwaiti, Saudi Arabian) oilsupplies in the Persian Gulf.Although there is only a “verysmall possibility” of open warin the Persian Gulf, it is “in-continued on page 11cident and chased down one ofthe perpetrators at 5460 S. Cor¬nell. A University security su¬pervisor noticed the similarityto the apprehended youth andthe description given by theprevious week’s victim of herassailant.Police then detained theyouth, and the rape victimidentified him from a lineup.The rape occurred the pre¬vious Saturday evening as awoman waited for a train at59th St. Two youths ap¬proached her. and one of themgrabbed her purse and fledsouth on the tracks, while theother raped her, before alsofleeing south on the tracks.Bob Mason, law enforce¬ment coordinator for the SouthEast Chicago Commission,said the victim’s “excellent”description of her assailantaided police greatly in identi¬fying the suspected rapist aweek later.Mason said the youth, who is16 years old, will go to courtcharged as a legal adult, be¬cause of new state laws classi¬fying older teens as adults incases of violent crime. By Jeff TaylorKonstantin Chernenko,picked to succeed Yuri Andro¬pov as general secretary of theSoviet Communist Party,“does not understand the prob¬lems of the Soviet Union” and“lacks the vision and courageto challenge the Soviet eco¬nomic bureaucracy,” said U ofC lecturer Lubosh Hale yester¬day. Hale, associate dean inthe Graduate School of Busi¬ness, is a practicing Sovietolo¬gist and former official of thesocialist government of Cze¬choslovakia.“For me his appointmentwas a surprise,” Hale said. “Itis not a Soviet tradition to givea second chance to those whohave been beaten.” Chernenkowas Andropov's main rival forpower after the death of Leon¬id Brezhnev in November,1982.Hale’s comments on the newSoviet leader were joined bythose of Richard Hellie. chair¬man of the College's RussianCivilization program, and D.Gale Johnson, chairman of theUniversity of Chicago Depart¬ment of Economics.Hale, who defected to theWest in 1968 following a Sovietinvasion, said Andropov’sdeath “is aln ost a blessing forUS-Soviet relations. This willgive the US a period of perhaps12 to 18 months when the Sovi¬ets will be completely involvedwith internal affairs and theirpolitical power struggle.”The transition of leadership,he said, “may even help the USwith the precarious situation inthe Middle East, and especial¬ly in Lebanon, because the ou¬tward orientation of Sovietleaders during successioncrises is traditionally limit¬ed.”Johnson, who has written onSoviet economy and agricul¬ture, said the change of leader¬ship “allows a change of policywithout a loss of face. It is now-possible without backsliding.”he said “for the Soviets to re¬sume negotiations with theUnited States.”Hale, however, though ad¬mitting Chernenko “may ac¬celerate the comeback of theSoviets to the negotiatingtable,” said he is “pessimisticabout the capabilities of a newSoviet leader to make substan¬tial changes in foreign policyattitudes.“If Soviet leaders want to survive in their positions ofpower,” he said, “they have tomeet again and again the mainsuccess criteria establishedunder Stalin — enhancementof the ‘superpower’ image ofthe Soviet Union and improve¬ment of the Soviet strategic di¬vision across the board. Theyhave to deliver,” he said, “orelse they become vulnera¬ble.”Chernenko, he added, “willnot be capable of deliveringanything on the domesticfront, especially in terms ofthe stagnating economy. He isa typical apparatchik, a partybureaucrat who has never helda position of his own. He wasalways ‘director of something'for Brezhnev.”Hellie said. “The biggestquestion now is whether An¬dropov’s campaign againstcorruption will be continued.”Chernenko, he argued, “will bea little softer than what Andro¬pov was, and internally, thismeans business as usual:every two-bit hustler and pettycriminal will find it easier nowto stick his head out.”But Hale maintains that theSoviet Union has always beenrife with corruption. “Corrup¬tion is the nature of the sys¬tem,” he said. “Once the stateand society have been merged,everything is for sale. As longas people are appointed to anyposition not on the basis ofmerit but loyalty to powerfulbosses, there will be corrup¬tion.”“We cannot expect greatchanges,” Hale said. “There isa very small hope that in a suc¬cession struggle between twocandidates of relatively equalstrength, one may have thesilly idea to appeal to the grassroots of the Communist Partyand unleash a quasi-democra¬tization process. And thismight produce changes in theSoviet SUDA federation thatwe don’t have the courageeven to imagine now.“The changes of this arevery limited.'’ he said, “butthey are there.”Of the chance for a Soviet“democratization,” Johnsonsaid, “not many Communistparties have ever done it. Itwould clearly reduce power atthe top, and I don’t think theleaders are willing to do that.”Hellie was more blunt. “It willnever happen.”InsideReligion: ‘everywhereand nowhere’page sevenCollege programsabroadpage nine PHOTOS BY KC MORRISMarvin Zonis Lubosh HaleRape suspect arrestedan izivt llmverj'ttt) ot ehutt^ojUumniA&oriatumyt*S0Xli$£iie AiUr J^vahxcXiQncareer* in fewnjfivmtt StfiCUMton j*r interdict AuienltShrt^ilie ctefinubt J&effAssorted*bvdUr, j\uton, SUxoco m*r,^Saltarfrili anA beitjA oct cM% cXuraiii^^Vttorn^i^oKrtaan f iurie, ^klaranA sSSiram, LtA.HU4nt*6ag, ftbvvLAxy tS, *«>$f ^ - *2/00 tuum£uhie \\ow$e - ^T5t HWAlaum Ivetta*4rin^ ^0ur 0*m iui\eti~tei>eray44 prMibebMORRY’S DELI in Hutchinson CommonsBRINGS YOU THEBEST DINNER BUYS ON CAMPUS!5 TO 8:30 P.M.Make Morry’s your dormitory service alternative!/ STEAK• 1/2 CHICKENNEW! BEEF EN BROCHETTENEW! BROOK TROUTOR VEAL PARMESANONLY...COMPLETE DINNERINCLUDESFRENCH FRIES,SALAD ANDDINNER ROLLOPEN MON-FRI7 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.SATURDAY, 9 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M. *&WANTEDFOR HANGING:Pendaflex Hanging File FoldersDescription: 4152 1/3 Green4152 1/5 ALIASRed, Blue, B. Green, Yellow, Red & OrangeFOR THAT LARGE HANGING - 4152 x 2 BOX-BOTTOM STYLEAlso available - TABS; & FOR THOSE WHOTHINK THEY WERE FRAMED WE HAVEDRAWER FRAMES. FOR LEGAL AID, WE HAVE4153 1/3 GREEN & 4153 1/5 REDREWARD: A Well Organized File System0 /VISAThe University of Chicago BookstoreStationery Department • 2nd floor970 E. 58th St.962-8729 • IBX 5-4103 (MosterCordj.j,£ -^3- ^_§ ^ r1Z5715 5.W00DIAWN AV£. 752-11Z72—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14,1984Reduced 1C fares stay down in this areaThe reduced fares on Illinois CentralGulf (IC) commuter trains will contin¬ue unchanged for stations on the South¬east Side, the South East Chicago Com¬mission (SECC) has announced.A reduced-fare demonstration pro¬gram has been in effect for IC stationsin the Hyde Park-Kenwood, Woodlawn,South Shore, South Chicago, andChatham areas since March 1, 1982.The reduced fares have been incor¬porated into the 1984 Regional Trans¬portation Authority (RTA) budget andprogram, approved by RTA’s new in¬terim board of directors in December.The demonstration-area fares, whichin 1982 had resulted in fare reductionsof as much as 40 percent, were not af¬fected by RTA’s across-the-board com¬muter railroad fare reduction of 10 per-cet which took effect February 1, 1984.According to Richard R. Gill, SECCtransportation committee chairman,fares in the demonstaration area arestill lower than the general level ofcommuter rail fares for comparabledistances elsewhere in the area.Gill pointed out that the one-way fareto the Loop from 53rd St. or Bryn Mawr(71st and Jeffery) is $1.35, while with¬out reduced fares it would be $1.95.Monthly tickets for the same ride are$47.25; without the reduced fares itwould be $52.65.“The greatly increased IC ridershiphas rewarded the efforts of everyonewho worked for the success of the de¬monstration,” Gill said. “The commu¬nities and the RTA have worked to¬gether very effectively on this.”During the December public hear¬ings on the RTA budget, the SECC de¬livered testimony favoring continua¬tion of the fare demonstration.The RTA has announced it is plan¬ning to introduce a $25 monthly link-upbus ticket which would be good onbuses connecting with commutertrains during rush hours. The SECCalso testified in favor of this concept,as well as further coordination be¬tween rail and bus services. Fare demonstration stations on theSoutheast Side include 47th St., 53rdSt., 55th-56th-57th Sts., 59th St., 63rdSt., 67th St., Grand Crossing (75th andSouth Chicago Ave.), and Chatham(79th & Greenwood) on the main line;and Stony Island, Bryn Mawr (71st &Jeffery), South Shore (71st and Ex¬change), Windsor Park (75th and Ex¬change), Cheltenham (79th and Ex¬change), 83rd St., 87th St., and SouthChicago (91st and Baltimore) on theSouth Chicago line.Valentine semi-formalInternational House will hold a Val¬entine’s Weekend semi-formal danceparty Saturday at 10 p.m. The partywill feature live music by the DonCarone band.Tickets are $10 at the Reynolds ClubBox Office, or $11 at the door Saturdaynight at the International House Asse¬mbly Hall, 1414 E. 59th Street. Admis¬sion includes drinks and munchies.Jackson for presidentThe Jesse Jackson for PresidentCommittee at the U of C will hold itsfirst organizational meeting tonight inthe Reynolds Club North Lounge at 7p.m. A representative from the Jack-son national campaign will be present.All Jackson supporters, as well asother candidates’ supporters who areinterested in progressive coalition poli¬tics, are encouraged to attend.Writers’ workshopThe North Shore/South Side Writers— an imaginative writing workshopconducted by Pierre Long, concernedwith the creation of novels, short-stories, poetry, and plays — meetsevery Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at 5744 S.Harper (excluding the months of June,July, August, September, and Jan¬uary). Since 1976, prizes have been awardedin the workshop. Money awards will begranted to participating members inMay of each year. The group is open toall interested writers and to persons ofall ages. The opening meeting will betonight at 7:30 p.m.Fire guts apartmentsFour apartments received treatmentfor extensive fire and water damageafter a fire Friday at 5750 KenwoodAve., according to Jonathan Kleinbard,vice-president for University news andcommunity affairs.The fire began at about 1 p.m. ac¬cording to one of the building’s occu¬pants who reported it one hour later.David O’Leary, director of Universitysecurity, said the fire is believed tohave been started by an iron which wasleft on in one of the apartments. No onewas injured.By Edward HernstadtSometimes having a job does notalways mean that you have a job, or soit seems to Elfrieda Prkic, the familiarwoman who ran the Ida Noyes Bakeryfrom its birth in 1974 to its quiet deathover the Christmas holiday.Frieda is still a visible figure in IdaNoyes, though, since the University hasgiven her a temporary position there asgeneral housekeeper until a more per¬manent job becomes available. IreneConley, director of SAO, reiterated thecommitment, both legal and personal,that the University has made to Frieda,but explains that it has been difficult tofind a suitable job.“I’m involved,” Conley added, “be¬cause I care about what happens toFrieda, and to help translate thebureaucratic language they speak atpersonnel into understandable En¬glish.”Maggie Galloway, Frieda’s unionrepresentative, is satisfied with theUniversity’s efforts. “Frieda is on the South Side ForumWHPK, 88.3 FM, will continue its“South Side Forum” series Thursdayat 5:30 p.m. Cliff Grammich, Maroonnews editor, and David Brooks, politicseditor for the Chicago Journal and po¬litical columnist for the Chicago RiverClipper, are the show’s panelists. CraigRosenbaum of WHPK moderates.WHPK will announce this week’s guestlater in the week.Zonis broadcast todayWHPK-FM will broadcast MarvinZonis’ W’oodward Court lecture on theMiddle East today at 5 p.m.Story hour on 57th St.57th Street Books is holding a storyhour from 10:30 to 11 a.m. Saturdaysfor children between the ages of 4 and6. 57th Street Books is at 1301 E. 57thSt.payroll now, and will be until some¬thing is found,” she said, “I’m not wor¬ried yet — we’ve not exhausted all theleads.”But despite the good intentions, Frie¬da is a little worried. “They’ve offeredme two jobs so far,” she said, “one inthe International House as a janitor,and one in the basement of the Regen-stein library filming microfiche. Well,they told me the first was a mistake,and as for the second, I don’t know any¬thing about michrofiche, and my eyesaren’t that good either.”The inappropriateness of the jobsand the seeming difficulty the Person¬nel Office has finding her a good posi¬tion upsets Frieda. “I just hope it allworks out,” she said, “so I can stop los¬ing sleep worrying about being out onthe street with no job.” Conley remainsconfident, though. “It’s just a matter oftime,” she said, “but to tell you thetruth, I’ll be sorry when Frieda does go— Ida Noyes has never been thisclean.”Prkic still displaced after Bakery’s closingThe University of ChicagoJohn M. Olin CenterpresentsSAMUEL HUNTINGTONProfessor of Government, Harvard UniversityScholar, Woodrow Wilson Center, Smithsonian Institution“WILL MORE COUNTRIESBECOME DEMOCRATIC?”Wednesday, February 15,19844:00 p.m.Social Science 122,1126 E, 59th StreetThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984—3Kissinger Commission: old dogs...old tricks?By Michael HertzOn January 10, the Kissinger Commission gavePresident Reagan and, likewise, the US Congressand public its recommendations for resolving the“crisis” in Central America. The President is sure tobe pleased for the report differs little from the ad¬ministration in both the use of rhetoric and the solu¬tions to the unrest in the region. The report focuseson three causes for the political turmoil in CentralAmerica, namely, economic stagnation, miserablesocial conditions in which the majority of CentralAmericans must suffer, and Soviet-Cuban provoca¬tions.Seeing the sources of the unrest in this way, the so¬lutions that are proposed are obvious: restore eco¬nomic growth, encourage huge social programs inhealth and education, and strengthen the military ca¬pacity of those governments trying to hold off Com¬munist advances in the Western hemisphere. Theproblem with the solutions are that they not onlywere tried and failed but that similar proposals im¬plemented in the 1960’s after the Cuban Revolutionactually contributed to the current unrest.The Kissinger Commission urgently recommendsthat the US commit $8 billion over the next five yearsalong with various other economic stimulants inorder to spur a recovery of the Central Americaneconomies. “Real growth must be restored,” (p. 10)urges the Commission. The false assumption uponwhich such a proposal is based is that economicgrowth is a primary factor in maintaining peace andstability and in fostering democracy.In the 1960’s, Kennedy’s Alliance for Progress con¬tributed significant aid to encourage economicgrowth in Latin America. Despite impressive growthduring the 1960’s and 1970’s, the Alliance for Pro¬gress failed to bring about the expected structuralchanges or democratization. Ironically, the Kis¬singer report recognizes these failures. “Economicgrowth of the 60’s and 70’s did not resolve the region’sunderlying social problems.” (p. 24)The recommendations made by the KissingerCommission embody the same contradictions whichplagued programs implemented in the 1960’s. The Al¬liance for Progress and an international economicboom fueled economic growth in Central Americaand created severe pressures for change from withinthe social structures of these societies while, simul¬taneously, large military expenditures for counter¬insurgency programs and the establishment of theCentral American Defense Council (CONDECA)created political and social “stagnation.” Rapid eco¬nomic growth resulting in violent social transforma¬tions could only be contained if political reformswere made. By “arming” traditional political elitesand reinforcing an anti-communist hysteria, politi¬cal reforms are unlikely. Democratization, peace,and stability are unlikely consequences of such con¬tradictory economic and military policies.The members of the Kissinger Commission recog¬nize the contradiction. In fact, they state that “trulyindigenous” reform or even revolutionary move¬ments in no way threaten US interests or security.However, according to the report, “international ter¬rorism, imported revolutionary ideologies, the ambi¬tions of the Soviet Union, and the example and en¬gagement of a Marxist Cuba are threatening thehopes for political progress” (p. 7). Surely, the sin¬cerity of such prestigious personalities as those who made up the Kissinger Commission cannot be doubt¬ed when they express respect for “truly indigenous”social movements but one must question whetherthose who have adopted the rhetoric of the Cold Warcan distinguish indigenous moves for reform fromthe international communist threat. The report sup¬ports continuing aid to the “rebels” who are attempt¬ing to overthrow the Nicaraguan Government. TheCommission recommends that the Foreign Assis¬tance Act be amended to allow US aid to be dedicatedto the training of police forces in Central America.The report suggests that the embargo on military as¬sistance to Guatemala be reconsidered. Finally, thereport advocates unspecified increases in militaryaid to El Salvador despite negligible improvementsin human rights abuses and no progress in the prose¬cution of those known to be responsible for the rapeand murder of four US nuns in 1980. According to theCommission, increased military aid will actually im¬prove human rights violations by the Salvadoranmilitary by “professionalizing” and “humanizing”their operations. The aid is given in the “pursuit ofan enlightened counter-insurgency effort.” (p. 94,my emphasis). Such military expenditures will in¬crease political stagnation in most Central Americancountries. How can the necessary political, econom¬ic, and social reforms be hoped for if such politicalstagnation is encouraged?Partly in response to the question, the Commissionincludes an entire section on “human development.”Recognizing that social unrest may be difficult tocheck if desperate social conditions under whichmost Central Americans live continue, the Commis¬sion proposes an extensive program of social ser¬vices attacking malnutrition, illiteracy, infant mo¬rality, and housing shortages throughout CentralAmerica. Unfortunately, the Commission, after pro¬posing large increases in US economic and militaryaid, leaves the bill for human development to theCentral Americans. “The burden of action in theseareas...lies primarily on the Central Americansthemselves. However well intentioned, no foreignercan feed, educate, doctor, clothe, and house anothercountry’s people without undermining the govern¬ment or creating cultural conflicts” (p. 68). It is safeto say that Central Americans if free to choose wouldrather risk the cultural conflicts that would possiblybe induced by vaccines, school materials, and hous¬ing supplies donated by the US, than the certain cul¬tural conflicts caused by Huey helicopters and na¬palm. Futhermore, the sensitivity of the Commissionfor “cultural imperialsim” is thrown into doubt bythe suggestion that Central American leaders bebrought to the US and be schooled in democratic val¬ues at either the International Visitors Program atthe United States Information Agency or the AFL-CIO’s George Meany Institute. Indeed, it is difficultto imagine Roberto d’Aubuisson of El Salvador whois nicknamed “blow torch Bob” after his own person¬al torture technique sitting in a civics class takingnotes about George Washington and the choppingdown of the cherry tree.The Kissinger Commission’s recommendationsare suspect. The numbers and dollars even when pro¬vided do not add up. The policies promise to repeatmany of the failures of the Alliance for Progress. Inaddition, the paternalistic attitude of US policy¬makers towards Third World areas permeates thereport. Despite decades of miserable social condi¬ tions and brutal repression, certainly Central Ameri¬cans remain incapble of organizing “indigenous”movements. “Neglect” is the word used in the reportto describe US-Central American relations. CentralAmerica, like most of the Third World, continues tobe portrayed as a disadvantaged child which withonly more tender loving care from the US will reformits troublesome ways. Considering the role of US cor¬porations such as United Fruit and US militarywhich has invaded Central America and the Caribbe¬an nations no less than 30 times this century, onemust ask whether the crisis in Central America isone of abuse rather than neglect.For anyone who is familiar with the career ofHenry Kissinger, the head of the Commission, the na¬ture of the recommendations and the patronizingtone of the report are of no surprise. In June 1969,Kissinger interpreted remarks made by ChileanForeign Minister Gabriel Valdes to President Nixonas impertinent and responded by saying to Vales:“You come here speaking of Latin America, but thisis not important. Nothing important came from theSouth. History has never been produced in theSouth”...(p. 263, Seymour Hersh’s The Price ofPower). In the report, the South is now of grave im¬portance. No longer is the danger in our “back¬yard”; now it has moved on to our “doorstep” (p.93). Urgent steps must be taken to restore peace andstability. “Our credibility world-wide is engaged (p.93). “Communist” advances in the Western hemi¬sphere would be a “sign of US impotence” (p. 93).Our shipping lanes are threatened. Millions of refu¬gees could flee to the North. Toppling of the CentralAmerican dominoes would require the US to commitlarge resources to defending the southern borders.Indeed, peace and stability in Central America isin the interest of the US; however, peace gainedthrough “pacification” and “enlightened counter-in¬surgency” measures will establish only an illusion ofstability in the region. Measures proposed by theContadora group (Mexico, Panama, Venezuela, andColumbia) indicate alternative paths to peace in theregion. These member countries share the US’s fearthat continued unrest in Central America will adver¬sely affect their own social experiments and nationalsecurity; however, they propose negotiated ratherthan military solutions to the problems. They favorpeace with dignity rather than peace at the end of abayonet. To encourage rather than repress progres¬sive social movements which challenge corrupt, bru¬tal military governments and seek to address press¬ing social injustices seems to be a more promisingway of establishing lasting peace and stability in theregion. Until US policy-makers recognize the de-perate human condition in Central America as theprimary cause of unrest in that region rather thanundocumented Soviet incursions, no amount of mili¬tary and economic assistance is going to bring peaceor stability to the region.The Kissinger Commission has failed to providecreative recommendations to the President, the Con¬gress, and the US public. The only thing the Kis¬singer report has accomplished is to raise the level ofhysteria concerning the problem. It jut goes to showthat “you can’t teach old dogs new tricks.”Michael Hertz is a graduate student in Latin Amer¬ican History.Speakers find abortion for genetic reasons unjustifiedBy Phil Cafaro“Abortion and Birth Defects” wasthe title and topic of a lecture spon¬sored Wednesday by the UniversityPro-Life Association in the Ida Noyeslibrary. Speaking were Arthur Flem¬ming of the philosophy department,and Sharon Grill, a member of the Na¬tional Spinobifida Association and theIllinois Commission on Child Abuse.Flemming led off by saying that“abortion for genetic reasons is inmost cases morally unjustified.”Flemming argued for this position ex¬amining several individual cases. Ac¬cording to him, the fact that almost ev¬eryone agrees on some cases whereabortion is justified (for example,where the mother’s life would be jeo¬pardized by carrying to term), and onsome cases where it is not (where acouple decides, in the last month of apregnancy, that having a child in twoyears would be more convenient) indi¬cates that both the mother and thefetus are commonly believed to haverights. The key question in deciding thepermissibility of individual abortionsis: Would rights be violated by the pro¬posed abortion?All persons in our society areguaranteed certain rights, said Flem¬ming. The application of these rights is often controversial but the basic con¬tent of them is not. Thus much discus¬sion revolves around the status of thefetus: is it a person with all the rightsthat that “status” entails, or is it some¬thing different or less, with fewer oreven, at an early stage of development,no rights? Flemming argued that be¬cause the specific reasons for abortinga genetically defective fetus are rea¬sons concerning consequences expect¬ed after the birth of the baby, then thatbaby must be considered the cause ofthose consequences. Since babies arepersons under the law, possessing allthe rights associated with persons, thefetus must be granted those rights also,regardless of its stage of develop¬ment.The bad consequences which mightinfluence a woman or a couple to abortfall into two classes: the burden thechild causes for others (especially hisparents); and the burden his life willbe to him. The burden on others can bevery great. Severely handicapped chil¬dren often need full-time nursing care,and even less severly handicappedchildren need special attention and in¬fant stimulation to develop their abili¬ties and to prepare them for the bestlife possible. Nevertheless, this burdenis imposed, according to Flemming, by a person. Neither the parents’ difficul¬ties or any utilitarian considerationsconcerning the resources the child willuse or the effect the child’s presencewill have on others can override thebasic right of the child, as a person,against loss of life.A second and more compelling argu¬ment is that the handicapped child’slife will be a burden to himself, andthat aborting it is a merciful act, per¬haps even enjoined by considerationsof benevolence. This argument de¬pends on the quality of a handicappedchild’s life. Two problems with this jus¬tification are that it is based on a poss¬ible calculation of the quality of a life,and that we do not usually allow otherpeople, even parents or guardians, todecide whether a life will be worth liv¬ing. With diseases such as spinobifidaor Down’s syndrome, the range ofhandicaps is very large. Children af¬flicted with spinobifida can have littleor severe paralysis, and can be bornretarded, but usually are not. Therange of retardation for Down’s syn¬drome children is very great. One can¬not tell how great the defect will be byexamining the fetus with either dis¬ease. More importantly, there is noway to know whether the handicappedperson will feel that his life is or is not worth living. It is not a parent’s or animpartial spectator’s decision onwhether a life is worth living, but theindividual’s own decision, which is cru- •cial here. And the overwhelming evi¬dence is that handicapped people dofind their lives worth living.Thus, the consequences of a geneti¬cally defective baby’s birth will rarelyoverrule considerations of his personalrights. The key here, again, is the ar¬gument that fetuses with genetic de¬fects must be considered as personswhen we argue from the consequencesof their presence after birth. If this istrue, then the fetus’s rights as a personalmost surely preclude abortion basedon these consequences.Flemming mentioned several casesin which he thought abortion of geneti¬cally defective fetuses was justified.First, if the fetus would have no chanceof growing into a person, defining aperson as an agent capable of directedaction (no matter how elementary). Inthe very rare case where a fetus fails todevelop a brain, it cannot be said togrow into a person. We would have aduty of kindness towards such a being,as we do towards all sentient beings,but not the strict duty to preserve andprotect its life, which is owned to per-continucd on page 114—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984AIMHIGHWork with the bestBe a communications/electronics or wea¬ther officer in the Air Force. The Air Forceis forging new frontiers in advancedtechnology. If you have a technical degreeor have taken calculus and physics thenyou could qualify. The Air Force offers yougood pay, complete medical care andmuch more. AIM HIGH. Contact:TSgt. Steven C. ThompsonSSgt. John Smith536 South Clark St. Room 279Chicago, II60605 (312)663-1640 liar East KitchenThis Week's Luncheon Special:11 a.m. -2:30 p.m. (Tuesday-Saturday)BBQ PORK, FRIED RICE & EGG FOO YUNG $2.45Try Something HOT On These ColdWinter Days!Hong Sue LobsterPea Pods & ScallopsBeef Tips, Far East StylePlus other dishes, just ask!1656 E. 53rd St.*955-2200Visa, MasterCard, and American Express acceptedYOUR ON-CAMPUSPHOTOHEADQUARTERSSales-Repair-Supplies• Rentals by day - week - month:Cameras, projectors, screens, recorders(w/valid U. ofC. I.D. only)• Prompt quality photo processing byKodak and other discount processorsAuthorized dealer sales for: Canon • Kodak • Nikon • Olympus• Pentax • Polaroid • Panasonic • Sony • Vivitar and others.- Batteries - Film• - Darkroom accessories - Video tapes- Cassette tapes - Chemicals- RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARD andTHE COMMUTING STUDENTS ASSOCIATION !presentSTEVIE RAYVAUGHANandDOUBLE TROUBLESATURDAY, FEBRUARY 188:00 p.m.Ida Noyes GymnasiumTICKETS: $7.00 STUDENTS (2 tix per UCID)$10.00 NON-STUDENTSAVAILABLE AT REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE962-7300Visa & MasterCard accepted•STUDENT TICKETS ON SALE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10*•NON STUDENT TICKETS ON SALE AFTER FEBRUARY 14*The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984—5The BSCD Student Advisory Committepresents aSTUDENT-FACULTY GET-TOGETHERfeaturingDr. Malka Moscona,Associate Professor Biology and the Collegespeaking on“Development and Malignancy: Teratocorcinoma”Wednesday, February 15,4:30 p.m. Harper 130Reception following in Harper 284The Other Theatre GroupVolponeby Ben Jonson1st Floor Reynolds Club Theatre Wednesday throughSaturday, February 15,16,17,18. 8:00 PMSGFC funded$3.00 General Admissionfor Reservations: 962-3414/‘MUsIOMUsIOMUsIC-^CJsTDA'CJ5)<*u31u& THE. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT of MUSICPresents:Thursday, February 16 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallJulia Tsien, piano.Music of Bach and Schumann.Admission is freeFriday, February 17 - Robert and Nicholas Mann Duo, violin/vioia8:00 p.m., Mandel HallLeclair: Duo for two violas in c minor; Prokofieff: Sonata fortwo violins, op.56; Shapey: Mann Duo for Violin and Viola(Chicago premiere); Krommer: Duo for two violins; Bartok:Duos for two violins.$9; UC student, $6. Tickets and information at the Departmentof Music Concert Office, Goodspeed Hall 310, 962-8068.Saturday, February 18 - University Chorus8:00 p.m., Mandel HallRodney Wynkoop, Conductor; Jay Rosenblatt, Accompanist.Opera Choruses by Verdi (Nabucco, Ernani, II Trovatore, LaForza del Destino); Donizetti (Don Pasquale); Puccini(Tosca).Also, Puccini's Messa di Gloria.Admission is free.Sunday, February 19 - Sequentia8:00 p m. Mandel HallBarbara Thornton, voice/organ; Benjamin Bagby,voice/harp; Margriet Tindemans, fiddle/psalterium.“Love and Lamentation in Medieval France.”$9; UC student, $5. Tickets available at Concert Office.UPCOMING EVENTSThursday, February 23 - Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallUniversity Chamber ChoirRodney Wynkoop, conductor; Jay Rosenblatt, accompanist.Music of Schumann, Brahms, and Alkan’s “Funeral Marchfor a dead parrot.”Admission is free.Sunday, February 26 - University Chamber Orchestra8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallBoccherini, J.C. Bach, and othersAdmission is free. 2n*>c.C/io.>X5rnX5:n* MUSlC^MUilOMUSlC^ Chicago Literary ReviewOPENMEETINGTONIGHTTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 148:00 P.M.5700 S. Blackstone #2Writers, editors, critics,fools, poets and dreamers welcome• Get Literary! •It’s the littleextras that makethe BIG DIFFERENCE.at MORRY’S in Hutchinson CommonsMONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 3 to 5 p.m.“HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS”’/4 LB. ALL BEEF CHARBROILEDHAMBURGERS “with all the trimmings”HOT DOGS “with all the trimmings”CHARBROILEDPOLISH "with all the trimmings” 99*39*99*FREE FRENCH FRIES WITH ANYPURCHASE OVER $3.00FREE PINT OF MORRYS ICE CREAMWITH ANY PURCHASE OVER $6.00INCREDIBLE BUYSIMORRY’S in Hutchinson Commons only6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984NEWSFascinated by religion’s place in the modem worldBy Audrey GuzikA university must explore the worldas it is, whether the world is supersti¬tious and mysterious, or not. This is aparaphrase of Martin Marty, professorin the Divinity School. He believes that,regardless of one’s own relgious con¬victions, the power and influence of re¬ligion in our history and present cul¬ture cannot be denied, and is wellworth studying.Marty is a minister of the Lutheranchurch, and describes himself as “crit¬ically loyal to the (Lutheran) tradi¬tion.” He finds this university the“ideal place” to study and teach. “Re¬ligion is everywhere and nowhere atthe University of Chicago,” saysMarty, whose own specialty is the his¬tory of Christianity.Although the subject is sacred tosome people, the methodology cannotbe. Religion and its history are studiedvery much the same way as any of thehumanities or social sciences.“Whether I teach in the history depart¬ment, or history of culture, or (in theDivinity School), I don’t teach dif¬ferently,” says Marty. “You can’t say,well, here I run out of documents andhere I don’t know how to use historicalmethods to argue so I’ll rely on Provi¬dence and say that God told me. Itwould just be unheard of.”Marty explained that there is noorthodoxy encouraged in the DivinitySchool. Although one branch of theschool is ministerial training, the stu¬dents come from a large variety of eth¬nic and religious backgrounds, and be¬liefs. Marty says that the goal of theDivinity School is to help students ac¬quire the tools to make “a matureangle of vision” of their own traditions.Like most other professors at the Uni¬versity we are teachers of teachers,”says Marty. Apparently, any teacherof religious subjects must have a widerperspective than his own beliefs mightnecessarily provide.Marty is fascinated by the place reli¬gion has in the modern world. The Uni¬versity of Chicago is like the rest oftwentieth century society in the uncon¬centrated omnipresence of religion inits studies. Marty believes there is “as much religion in the modern world asthere ever was,” but the individualiza¬tion that characterizes religious prac¬tices and beliefs today “makes it lesseasily grasped”. Marty says that the“private meanings that people havedon’t get noticed as much.” His cur¬rent research is on this topic. He hopesto have finished four volumes on twen¬tieth century religion by the time he re¬tires from teaching.Marty is not the first professor to in¬dicate the value of teaching while con¬currently doing research. “It’s onething to read about a thing and domes¬ticate it, and it’s another thing to havethe people you work with every dayembody it,” he says. The example he gave was his realization of the impor¬tance of women in religion. The historyof religion, related as church politics orthe polemics of theologions, specifical¬ly ignores their presence. When a fe¬male student pointed this out to Martyin regard to his book Righteous Em¬pire, it had much more personal im¬pact, and changed his perspective onthe subject.Marty believes that not only is thebest research done in the live companyof students, but that students gainmore from being exposed to the fore¬fronts of their subjects. “A teacher,even at the undergraduate level,should not repeat last year’s notes orgive (the students) something they can get in a textbook.” Although there isnot much undergraduate participationin the Divinity School, Marty says thatthe school is “friendly to undergradu¬ates” or anyone with an interest. Manyclasses are open to undergraduates,and students are encouraged to explorethe faculty and resouces there. Studentinterest comes from a large variety ofsources, but Marty believes part of themotivation to come from the intensitywith which the question of the meaningof life is explored in religious studies.The study of religion is the explora¬tion of human lives and feeling. It is thestudy of a major source of human mo¬tivation and interaction. To MartinMarty that will never be a grim or sol¬emn pursuit.Assembly considers bus service optionsBy Nathan SchoppaStudent Government President JoeWalsh described to the SG AssemblyThursday a proposal designed to helpalleviate the transportation problemsof University students and faculty liv¬ing in East Hyde Park. If that or a si¬milar proposal is enacted, those resi¬dents would see an expansion in atleast the East-West Bus service, dur¬ing winter quarter.In other matters at the meeting, Ma¬deleine Levin announced that Universi¬ty professors had voted 2-1 in favor ofhaving greater gradation in grading.Though there still must be discussionon a more specific plan, she said, “Itseems pretty sure that 47- grading willbecome active.”The Assembly also spent consider¬able time listening to and approving 18Finance Committee recommenda¬tions.The subject of extending bus serviceto residents of East Hyde Park hadbeen discussed at length at a Jan. 19Assembly meeting. Numerous Asse¬mbly members then expressed con¬cern that with the arrival of winterthese people were without a means toget to the campus when they mostneeded it. Previously, they had beenable to ride on the Shoreland bus, butnow that service is strictly limited to Shoreland residents, a restrictionbeing enforced by having the busdrivers check to make sure that stu¬dents have their Shoreland keys.Currently the East-West bus has itslast morning run at 8:30 a.m. Walsh’sproposal would add up to three hoursduring the winter quarter — at 9:00,9:30, and 10:00 a.m.In a meeting between Walsh and Fre-derich L. Sweeney (Director of Opera¬tions and Operations Analysis), the twodiscussed what would be the main ob¬stacle to such a plan — expenditures.That is, if losses from the added runsgo beyond $800, the experimental ser¬vice would have to be reconsidered.“Mr. Sweeney wanted a figure thatmarked success,” Walsh said.Losses would occur if there were notenough riders during those runs. Itcosts approxmately $20 an hour to runthe bus; and that money must be madethrough the 45 cent charge for eachpassenger.These financial losses would onlyadd to losses already experienced bythe service. Last year that service, to¬gether with the North-South bus, lostroughly $26,000. Though that figure issignificant, W’alsh emphasized thatthere are going to be losses with such aservice: “It has to be that way.” Inhope that there could be a reduction in the overall expenditures so that losseswould not be too high, the proposalwould examine the possibility of ter¬minating the 7:30 a.m. East-West run“if ridership is sufficiently low.”But if the added service proves to besuccessful, the proposal stated that thebusing committee would examine fur¬ther extending the East-West and/orNorth-South services.At the Jan. 19 meeting, Assemblymembers also expressed concern overthe fact that the East-West bus is limit¬ed to Lab School students during the2:30 p.m. run. Some wished to open therun to University students. -However, Walsh proposed that therestriction should not be removed be¬cause safety considerations necessi¬tate a policy of not having Lab Schooland University students ride on thesame run. Parents of Lab School stu¬dents, particularly, want such a poli¬cy.Walsh also said there will be a lookinto the advantages and disadvantagesof expanding the East-West service inthe afternoon, extending the North-South service, and using smallerbuses, though he stated this last pro¬posal would not save any money.Walsh finalized the proposal on Mon¬day morning and then presented it tothe committee in charge of the bussingservices.3d VILCO.** /siip•\y$I*YkU) '’Valentine^ <*Weekend Senyjbrmal^DANGE (’PART(’V*WHEN:SaturdayFebruary 18, 1984Starts at 10:00 p.m.WHERE:International House (I-House)1414 E. 59th Street 753-2270PURCHASE TICKETS IN ADVANCE:I-HOUSE ICE CREAM PARLOROpen Monday - Saturday8:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m.REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICEOpen Monday - Friday11:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.Saturday (5706 S. University)1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. COME:Alone or^ With Friends ^* TICKETS:General Public $10.00Dollar extra at the doorDIRECTIONS:I-House is located on 59th Streetbetween Blacks tone & DorchesterADMISSION:You must be 21, or older, to attend.Admission price includes numerousbeverages, delicious food and theDon Carone Dance Band, which willplay swing, jazz, big band, Top 40,etc. dance music.Visa & MasterCard acceptedI $X&v*Y8X<S>gThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14. 1984—75254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 ^PERSONAL COMPUTERS—Sales, Education, Service,Computers, printers, modems and supplies.AUTHORIZED KAYPRO DEALERVALUE ADDED SYSTEMS1701 E. 53r4 Street 007-4440[MAROON H96295551"CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8.30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 C. 63rd MU 4-1062An Interfaith Marriage:You Can’t Get There From HereProf. Stanley RosenbaumResearch fellow 1983-84, Institute for the AdvancedStudy of Religion, U.C. Divinity School; Directorof Judaic Studies, Dickenson College, Carlisle, PennsylvaniaMrs. Mary RosenbaumWriter, Author of a novel about the Prophet JeremiahFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 178:30 p.m.atHILLEL HOUSE • 5715 5. WOODLAWN • 759-1187The University of Chicago Early Music at Mandel SeriesSUNDAY-FEBURARY 19*8:00 PMMANDEL HALL*57th & UNIVERSITY$9 (UC Student, $5) Tickets at Department of Music Concert Office,Goodspeed Hall 310, 5845 S. Ellis Avenue, Chicago, 60637; 962-8068.(Tickets may also be purchased at Mandel Hall Ticket Center afterFebruary 14.) All seats reserved. Chicago Counseling CenterClient-centered and experientialtherapy since 1945 for individuals,couples and familiesA Registered PsychologicalAgencyHyde Park and Loop Locationsannouncing.....Incest Survivors Group Evenings(Mid-April)Womens Life Evaluation Group Mon Evenings(February 20th)Writer’s Group Fri Noontime(April)Noontime Loop Group Date to be setMeaningful Relationships (February 18th)For information call 684-1800Insurance Acceptedthat AciiL&JrneiTHE BEST THAI FOODIN HYDE PARK—SERVEDEACH NIGHT MONDAY THRUSATURDAY AT MORRY’SIN HUTCHINSON COMMONS.SAVOR THE RICHNESS OF AUTHENTICTHAI RECIPES BY OUR NATIVE CHEFCHAVALIT PUANGSOMBAT. ENJOY AVARIETY OF APPETIZERS, SOUP, YOURCHOICE OF THREE ENTREES, RICE, THAIRICE AND DESSERT, BEVERAGE.A UNIQUE DINING EXPERIENCE ON THEU OF C CAMPUS — NATIVE, COSTUMEDWAITRESSES, TABLE SERVICE WITHCHINA AND TABLE CLOTHS AND...ANAMAZINGLY LOW PRICE!IF THERE'S LEADERSHIPINYOULOCSCAN BRING rroutOCS (Army Officer Candidate School)is a 14-week challenge to all that’s in you... themental, the physical, the spirit that are part ofwhat makes a leader.If OCS were easy, it couldn’t do the job. Itwouldn’t bring out the leader in you, or help youdiscover what you have inside.But when you finish and graduate as a com¬missioned officer in the Army, you’ll know. You’llknow you have what it takes to lead. And you’ll betrim, alert, fit, and ready to exercise the leadershipskills that civilian companies look for.If you’re about to get your degree and youwant to develop your leadership ability, take theOCS challenge.Call your local Army Recruiter, and askabout OCS.SSG MULDROW643-0432ARMIBEALLYOUCANBE.ccPC8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984College tests foreign waters through programs abroadBy Philip GlistStudents in the College, primarilyunderclassmen, will be glad to learnthat they may soon have opportunitiesfor study abroad which have notexisted here for decades. According toDean of Students Herman Sinaiko,these opportunities are due to achange in the College’s view of itself.“There was active discouragement ofstudy abroad programs for manyyears. It was felt that the Universityof Chicago was unique and specialand better than everybody else, andthat meant once you matriculatedhere you should do all of your workhere.”Under the recent administration,Sinaiko says, “We’re operating from alevel where we feel comfortable. Wedon’t have to prove ourselves toanyone, and we would like to open upthe College to some greater range ofacademic experiences.” To this end,Sinaiko and college adviser PeterGoldsmith are encouraging studentsand faculty members to explorepossibilities for foreign study withother colleges, and for the first timethe college is allowing students toreceive a full year of U of C academiccredit for participation in SarahLawrence College’s Academic Year inParis, and in Brown University’sprogram at the University of Bologna.The two principle concerns of moststudents considering foreign study arewhether the U of C will give themcredit for the courses they take, andthe cost of the program. In past yearsstudents would take a formal leave ofabsence from the College, and uponreturn would petition the Committeeon Academic Standing for credit forwork done elsewhere. The difficultywas that taking a leave of absencemeant forfeiting financial aid andUniversity health insurance, andrequired many students to beginpaying back their educational loans.This is still the required procedure forall study abroad programs except forthe Brown and Sarah Lawrenceprograms, which Sinaiko calls “new,experimental pilots.”Students participating in either ofthese programs pay tuition directly tothe University of Chicago, which isthen later billed by Brown and SarahLawrence. In the case of Brown,whose tuition is less than U of C’s,students nonetheless must pay asmuch for tuition as they would if theywere in residence. Studentsparticipating in the Sarah Lawrenceprogram, however, must pay SarahLawrence’s tuition rate, which ishigher than U of C’s. Students in theseprograms maintain their official U ofC status, and are eligible for financialaid, University health insurance, andreceive direct credit and placement oftheir record abroad on their U of Ctranscript. Though the deadlines forthis year’s program in Bologna havepassed, students have three moreweeks to apply for Sarah Lawrence’sstudy in Paris program. Currently theU of C has four undergraduatesstudying with the Paris program, andthree studying in Bologna.These two programs represent theCollege’s first successful efforts at“piggy-backing” on other college’sprograms. Sinaiko says this allows Uof C to circumvent the enormoustechnical difficulties of directlyestablishing an academic programwith a foreign university. Sinaikoadmits they are only beginning torealize these complexities. “Thewhole study abroad program has a lotof ramifications which we are onlyjust starting to discover. Forexample, there are possibilities at thegraduate level and at the faculty levelwhich the University does not haveany administrative means ofestablishing. The Provost is presentlyengaged in setting up a committee tostudy the thing on a University-widescale. Eventually the chairman of thiscommittee, who would be like theUniversity’s foreign minister, wouldcertify — or not certify — any studyabroad programs brought to him bythe faculty, or any interestedstudents.” Once approved, a studentwould then receive full II of C academic credit for his studycompleted elsewhere.Goldsmith and Sinaiko attribute theunique status afforded the Brown and “the first effort is not necessarily tohave students study language. Theinterest is really in seeing studentsstudy courses of instruction in aSarah Lawrence programs to“tremendous initiative” on the part ofstudents and faculty in the RomanceLanguages Department. Sinaiko saysthe administration has solved thetechnical problems such as creatingnew kinds of registration,reprogramming the computer tohandle new transcripts, and creatingnew kinds of accounts at the bursar’soffice. The remaining policy-makingproblems can be handled by those inthe individual departments who are incontact with US schools running studyabroad programs.That students and faculty inromance language were the first toimplement foreign study programs,does not mean that only languagemajors are intended to involvethemselves in study at foreignuniversities. Sinaiko says severalfaculty members in history areseriously examining possibilities forboth graduate and underjgraduatestudy at the National University ofMexico in Mexico City. He streeses,however, that such efforts are notdepartmental programs. “Anystudents from any part of the College,theoretically, could work in any one ofthese programs, and go, if theuniversity they were going to had theappropriate courses.”Goldsmith underlines this, adding. subject area that is not taught in thesame way, or in the sameperspective, as here in the UnitedStates—to go to France for instance,and study criticism the way it istaught in France.”Students in the Bologna programspend no more than one-third of theirstudy time on Italian. The students inthis program spend the othertwo-thirds of their work time onsubjects ranging from Italianliterature and civilization, to politicalscience and economic history, tocommunications and theatre, whichcounts among its professors thesemiotician-turned bestselling author,Umberto Eco. Inspired by reports ofstudents participating in the Bolognaand Paris programs, as well as byreports of U of C professors whoinvestigated these courses first-hand,Sinaiko envisions expansion into otherregions. “I would very much like tosee, in addition to someSpanish-speaking programs in Mexicoor elsewhere in Latin America orSpain, a program in Germany, atleast one in England, and I would loveto see one in Asia.”Despite the fact that, at least for thenear future, students participating inprograms other than those in Italyand France will still be required toforfeit their status as full-time U of C students, Sinaiko and Goldsmithremain cautiously optimistic aboutexpanding study abroad options forstudents in all disciplines. Goldsmithpoints out, “my experience to datewith the Committee on AcademicStanding is that they are beingrelatively generous about approvingpetitions for credit for courses doneabroad. They can approve credit onlyto apply toward the 42, (or howevermany) courses you need to graduate.They do not approve courses, forconcentration, or Divisionalrequirements in one of the fourbranches. If students need to fulfillcertain requirements, before they goto the Committee they must see theSenior Advisor in their Division, orthe Area Counselor in theirconcentration, and get their approvalof the quality of the work they havedone.” With this assurance, Sinaikofeels the student will experience littledifficulty in getting the Committee onAcademic Standing to allow foreigncourses to fulfill specificrequirements.How much can the average first- orsecond-yeaf student expect to profitfrom the expanding study abroadopportunities arising from whatSinaiko terms “a loosening” ofacademic restrictions? Though headmits, “we should have done this 20years ago,” he expects, “in typicalChicago fashion, not one of theseprograms will every be terribly large.We’re not going to send masses ofstudents, but we think it would be agreat enhancement to the College ifthere were a wide range of options. Ifa student really wanted to go and doit, it should be possible, and we wouldlike to be able to facilitate that andmake it a regular, accepted part ofthe degree program.”“Interestingly,” says Sinaiko. “wehave encountered almost noopposition from faculty. There issome argument about which program,and how it should be done, but theseare only technical details. The sensethat the students should be permitted,and in certain cases encouraged to dowork for a quarter or year abroad, Ithink has general acceptance.”The initiative to realize the successof newlv-acceptable foreign study willcome not from Sinaiko and Goldsmith,but from student-teacher cooperation.Goldsmith admits “my role isprimarily to help students with thebureaucratic steps. I'm not in anyposition to advise them about thequality of one program over another,although generally I have an idea offaculty members who might be ableto do just that.” For studentsconsidering study abroad. Sinaikoadds, “Though we wouldn'texclusively insist upon it, I think thethird year is the right time for it.because you have had enoughbackground, and enough maturity incollege to be able to use the foreignexperience, but you also get to comeback, and make use of it in yoursenior year.” Sinaiko sees hisresponsibility as one of providing arange of opportunities. Planning forstudy abroad should begin when astudent begins taking a language,usually around first or second year,though this is not a strict prescriptionOne resource for interested studentsis Work, Study. Travel Abroad: TheWhole World Handbook (published byThe Council on InternationalEducational Exchange. $6.95, from 205E. 42nd St., New York, NY 10017),which contains a thorough listing ofstudy programs abroad sponsored byNorth American colleges anduniversities that are members ofCIEE. Upon receiving information onrelevant programs using this guide,the student could consult withprofessors in his department anddecide on the most suitable course.Peter Goldsmith is then available toserve as a liaison between the studentand the administration. If studentstake it upon themselves to initiate thisprocess, with the help of Dean Sinaikoand Peter Goldsmith, the U of C willeventually join the legion ofuniversities whose students benefittrom the manilold advantages ofstudy abroad.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984—9M.C1 Sale Dates: Feb. 15-21 1OSCAR MAYERBOLOGNA12 oz. 99*ECKRICHSMOKEDSAUSAGE $169COUNTRY’SDELIGHTBUTTER1 lb. 6159GREEN GIANTASSORTEDVEGETABLES16 oz. bags 69*NAVELORANGESlb. 39*REDDELICIOUSAPPLESlb. 49*AUNT JEMIMAWAFFLES 99*CAMPBELL’SCHICKENNOODLESOUP 3/100BAKINGPOTATOESlb. 29*EXTRA LEAN A MSTONEWHEATTHINS 89CHEESE OF THE WEEKHAVARTw/dill’2s!KRAFTCOLBY CHUNK8oz. 5129STOUFFER'SZUCCHINILASAGNA11 oz. 5J29ARMOURCHILI15 oz. 79*ARMOURCORNEDBEEFHASH 99*UPTONTEABAGS48 ct 5J19KRAFTPRESERVES 79*CONTAIN NATOMATOES29 oz. can 89*FINER FOODSSERVINGF W i l R11 '. H (j R £ SK'MBiFK Pi IK .y^PS'.Sw-- • •. i • : /■ . i.- SPRING SEMESTERIN THE ROCKIESAttend the NATIONAL OUTDOORLEADERSHIP SCHOOL and earn collegecredit while learning a broad spectrum ofwilderness skills.Your classroom will extend from northernWyoming to southern Utah. You'll spendithree and a half months exploring thegreat Rocky Mountain Wilderness.The NOLS semester program includesfive intensive expeditions:• Ski touring Wyoming's winterbackcountry9 Canyoneering in the remote Utah'desert• Caving expedition9 Climbing course9 Whitewater kayakingAdd a challenging dimension to yourjcollege education. College credit isavailable through the University of Utah,via NOLS, or through arrangements madeon your own campus.We have openings on the followingcourses:FEB. 24 - MAY 30MARCH 7-JUNE 9For more information, write or call:The National OutdoorLeadership SchoolP. O. Box AA Dept. SS] 0Under, WY 82520(307) 332-6973 "HiuO It'Till: NATIONAL OUTDOOR~Li:\Di:iLSIlll> SCHOOL a uniqueopportunityforMath/Science(Majors/Minors/Aptitudes)For you and for the world. PeaceCorps will combine your educationwith training to prepare you for avolunteer position in: • Education• Fisheries • Ftealth • Agriculture• Forestry or other areas. You II meetnew people, learn a new language,experience a new culture and gain awhole new outlook. And while you'rebuilding your future, you'll be help¬ing people in developing countrieslearn the basics of technological ad¬vancement.Film Seminar: Tues;Feb 14th at 4 inPI acement OfficeReynolds Club.Interviews, Wed, Feb22 sign up now atthe Placement Office&SPRING BREAK *84.THE TRADITION LIVES ON!TAKE THE GREATERFORT LAUDERDALE BREAK.Hollywood, Pompano Beach, Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Deerfield Beach.Want the tradition to live on forever? Then order your full-color 17" x 23" poster of Spring Break ’84 by sending$3.00 (check or money-order, no cash, please) to: Spring Break ’84, 500 Third Avenue West, Seattle. WA 98119.Be sure to include your name, address and college. Price includes postage and handling.10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14,1084Daley’s remarks at Compton: from racism to rapeRichard M. Daley, Cook Countystate’s attorney, made an appearanceon campus last week at a sherry hour inShoreland’s Compton House. The fol¬lowing are excerpted remarks Daleymade on several subjects. The maintopic of Daley’s remarks was gangcrime; coverage of that issue appearedSpeakerscontinued from page foursons. Flemming also thought that abor¬tion in cases of Tay Sachs disease is de¬fensible, on the grounds that thedisease is invariably fatal in the firstfive or six years of life, and the child’ssufferings are not balanced by hope fora decent life. He emphasized, however,that these cases are exceptional, as al¬most all handicapped children do qual¬ify as persons and can live some kind of in Friday’s Maroon.On the pre-emptory exclusion ofjurors by race: We do not exclude any¬body because of race, creed, or sex.Most judges in the state judicial systemagree with this position. It is not a poli¬cy of our office to exclude potentialjurors by race.valuable life. ,Finally, Flemming said that a coupleshould not have to shoulder the burdenof a handicapped child alone. If theirsociety refuses to help them, then theburden of a severely handicapped childcan be so overwhelming that abortionseems the only alternative. This wouldnot justify such an abortion, but causeus to redirect our blame from themother or couple to society. If handi¬capped children have the same rightsas other persons, then civil societymust protect those rights, because On minority hiring: We’ve increasedtremendously the numbers of blacks,women, and Hispanics in the state’s at¬torney’s office. Our office staff reflectsall the communities of Cook County.We’ve done this not because it wasfashionable but because it was the rightthing to do.such protection is beyond the means ofthe individuals directly involved.Following Flemming’s discussion,Grill discussed her experience raisinghandicapped children. Since the birthof her eighth child, who was born withspinobifida, Grill has adopted twomore children with spinobifida andthree with Down’s syndrome. Shetalked about the importance of givinghandicapped children infant stimula¬tion, and the overwhelming impor¬tance of keeping children in familiesand out of institutions to allow them todevelop to their full potential. She com¬pared the two Down’s syndrome chil¬dren who had spent three and fouryears institutionalized before sheadopted them, and the Down’s syn¬drome infant she adopted. The youngerchild was much more lively and in¬teractive as a result of the greater at¬tention, she said.Grill also talked about the supportthat she and her husband have re¬ceived from adoption agencies, localdoctors and hospitals, and their natu¬ral family in caring for the children.She assured the audience that coupleswith handicapped children are not lefton their own in the US, but are givenfinancial and counseling help. This isnot the case in many other countries,even those countries wealthy enough toafford expensive care for such chil¬dren. In closing, Grill noted that thereis a backlog of couples waiting to adoptspinobifida, Down’s syndrome, andother handicapped youngsters, andventured that that boded well for oursociety. On current state wiretapping laws: Ithink that the Illinois law, which re¬quires the consent of one party, shouldbe changed to meet the same standardas the federal government (which doesnot require the consent of either partyRichard Daleyafter permisson for wiretapping isgiven — ed. note). It would make wire¬tapping more instrumental and is veryneeded for law enforcement.On Daley’s institution of verticalprosecution: We’ve been very success¬ful with it in the narcotics area and thegang area. We have horizontal prosecu¬tion in the other areas. Certain types ofcrimes need special identification andprocedure which vertical prosecutiongives them. Rates of successful prose¬cution have gone up in areas wherewe’ve introduced vertical prosecution.On rape and its victims: The crime ofrape is a violent crime and not a sexualone, which many in society consider it.We need to recognize its violence aswell as paying serious attention to theproblems of the victim. More public ed¬ucation is needed on the crime’s vio¬lence and the victim’s problems.Zoniscontined from page onecumbent on the US to prepare” and‘‘open links of communication.”Zonis cited the ‘‘Lebanon embrolio”as a better opportunity for the USSR to‘‘humiliate” the US. Referring to thedeployment and subsequent pullout ofmarines in Lebanon, Zonis said ‘‘thePresident and his foreign policy haveproven to be bankrupt and beyond rec¬tification.” Zonis predicted, however,that Reagan would be re-elected be¬cause the American public is ‘‘willingto forgive this President for any¬thing.”Explaining that the actions of Syriaand Israel are instrumental to Leban¬on’s future, Zonis told of Syrian Presi¬dent Assad’s allegiance to the Soviets.Countering the notion that Syria is a“USSR puppet,” Zonis said Syria is“calling the shots of the USSR in theMid-East” because of Syria’s positionas the only Soviet ally left in the Middle East.Zonis warned that Syria could dragthe Soviet Union into war in Assad’sstruggle for dominance in the Arabworld. Desiring to control Lebanesepolitics, Assad has tried “to precludeletting any consolidated power to ob¬tain a clear-cut victory.” Zonisstressed that Assad’s divide-and-con-quer stratagem will eventually leadhim to come to the aid of MarioniteChristians and President Gemayel.This allegiance, however, could be atenuous one, contingent on Assad’s de¬mands which include the approbationof a peace treaty in which both Egyptand Lebanon recognize the state ofIsrael.Zonis received his BA from Yale andhis PhD in political science from MIT.He has also pursued his education inbusiness administration and the Per¬sian language at Harvard University.His fields of specialty include psycho¬history, Mid-East affairs, and Iran.Zonis’ lecture will be broadcast to¬night on WHKP at 5 p.m.ATTENTION!!!ALL CALIFORNIA STUDENTSCAN EITHER YOU OR YOUR PARENTS STILLUSE FINANCIAL AID THIS YEAR?The CLAS* loan program is now available to Californiastudents and their parents. The program which is similar tothe Guaranteed Student Loan Program (GSLP) allowsparents to borrow up to $3,000 per year to help witheducational costs. It is also available to independentundergraduates and graduate students.This program is made availablethrough the California StudentLoan Authority'California Loans to Assist Students ij FOR MORE INFORMATION SEND THIS COUPONJ TO THE:Ij CALIFORNIA STUDENT LOAN AUTHORITYI 915 Captiol Mall, Room 280| Sacramento, CA 95814I| Name: .I| Address:IIII School:IThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984—11Women’s basketball team takes two moreWill face St. Norbert for titleBy Geoff SherryThe University of Chicago women’sbasketball team is one step away fromthe conference championship afterdowning two more conference foes lastweekend. Chicago (13-5, 10-0), humi¬liated Lawrence University 71-23 andhandled scrappy Ripon College 62-51. player figured in the scoring withHelen Straus and Gretchen Gates pac¬ing the Maroons with 14 and 13 points.Chicago outrebounded the Vikings-32-16 with Straus swiping 8. TheMaroons allowed Lawrence only ninefield goals the entire game for a feeble22 percent from the field while theMaroons tossed at a respectable 52 per¬cent clip.Ripon, however, was not a push¬over.Gates poured in 20 points the firsthalf to pace the Maroons to a 20 pointlead at the intermission. “We playedour kind of game in the first half; ourballhandlers were working the ballwell,” commented McCarthy.The second half was a very differentstory. Ripon slapped a press on theMaroons and utilized the shooting abili¬Women’s varsity basketball in ac¬tion Saturday at Henry Crown.The Maroons focus their attention onFriday’s clash at St. Norbert, whichwill in all likelihood decide the confer¬ence crown.The Maroons opened the weekendwith the most lopsided victory of theyear. Chicago’s 48 point victory overLawrence was highlighted by balancedscoring and a good transition game.Assistant coach Kevin McCarthy re¬marked, “We did not expect to win thatbig; everything was going well forus.”Going well indeed. Every ChicagoStudios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A.M. -4:30 P.M.Monday thru Friday PHOTO BY KC MORRISty of their lofty center Terry Wadzinskito spur a comeback that closed the gapto five midway through the secondhalf. McCarthy added, “The press wasa real problem; it took a while to ad¬just.” Once they did adjust, the restwas academic.Ripon continued to play tough de¬fense but Chicago’s perimeter shootingproved too tough. “They collapsed onthe inside so our guards had to pick upthe slack,” commented McCarthy.Gates finished with 24 points, whileKaren Walsh chipped in 11.The Maroons have a week off to pre¬pare for the biggest game of the seasonTheChicagoMaroonStudent Newspaper of theUniventty of ChicagoSAVING BABIES...Recording star Evelyn King:“There is no greater joy thanto have a healthy, beautifulbaby. But not all babies are sofortunate — 250,000 infants areborn with physical or mentalbirth defects each year. TheMarch of Dimes Birth DefectsFoundation works to savebabies.”SupportMarch of DimesMBBBWTH CXFfCTS FOUNDATION ■■■■ against St. Norbert. Chicago nippedthe Green Knights 68-67 last month infront of the biggest crowd of the sea¬son. This time the game will be inGreen Bay, and will it have an effect?“They are definitely going to betough in their home gym. They have avery good sports program and are justas aware as we are what this gamemeans,” commented head coachDiann Nestel. smart basketball it they are to win. St.Norbert is a taller team which playswith a similar philosophy to Chicago’s.Beverly Davis and Karyn Van Steen-landt will be forced to guard a player3-4 inches taller than themselves, whileDana Howd and Karen Walsh mustcontrol the tempo of the game.McCarthy concluded, “We have themomentum; they have to beat us. Ourplayers are confident and ready toplay.Chicago will have to play quick,Men’s track gets good practiceFace NU after other teams cancelBy Shong ChowProbably the most important part ofthe non-scoring men’s track meet heldhere Thursday was what never hap¬pened; North Central College, DePaulUniversity, and Beloit College, whowere all scheduled to appear, withdrewfrom the event for a variety of reasons,the major one being the Illini Classic inChampaign, which was moved up aweek and conflicted with Thursday’smeet. Meanwhile, Northwestern, whowas not scheduled, welcomed a chanceto practice, and sent a partial squad ofmiddle and long distance runners.U of C head coach Ted Haydon saidprior to the meet that the de-emphasisof competition would help his teamoverall. “What we stress in a meet likethis is the development of the athleteswho don’t have to worry about pointsand can work on techniques or run inwhatever event they would like to,” ex¬plained Haydon.Despite what was essentially a prac¬tice meet (in half the events the onlycompetitors were from the U of Cteam) several U of C participants setpersonal bests. Most impressive among these were performances byAnthony Cashman and Aaron Rourke.Cashman, a freshman shotputterfrom New Jersey, had the best throw ofhis college career with a toss of 43-3surpassing his previous best by abouteight inches. “I’m lifting on the ballbetter than I ever have,” said an ecsta¬tic Cashman. “I would really be happyas a freshman to finish in the top five(in the MCAC conference standings)shotputting; it’ll be tough, but I’m real¬ly high about the shot like never be¬fore.”Equally impressive was Rourke inthe mile, who cut two seconds off hisprevious best with a 4:18 in the mile. “Ijust ran my own race and concentratedon getting 2:06 in the half-mile,” ex¬plained Rourke. Despite congratula¬tions from numerous people at themeet, Rourke was not overly im¬pressed. “I still feel there is room forimprovement,” he said.The U of C men’s track team’s nextscheduled meet is Thursday againstWabash College, Wheaton College, andconference foe Beloit College at 6 p.m.at the Field House.Wrestlers 2nd in WisconsinBy Don HaslamWith the conference championshipright around the corner, the college’svarsity wrestling team has proved onceand for all that it will be in the thick ofthings when the finals are held at 2:30p.m. this Saturday here in the FieldHouse. The squad finished in secondplace out of nine teams Saturday at theLawrence Invitational, and did so withtwo former conference champions outof action with injuries.The team racked up 73 points for aclose second to Elmhurst College’s 80points. Conference rivals Ripon andLawrence were a more distant thirdand fourth with 45 and 25 points. EveryChicago team member placed in themeet, as the Maroons took four firsts,two seconds, and a third place finish.Jeff Farwell won his 134 lb. champi¬onship and Mike Perz won a close deci¬sion for the 142 lb. weight class champi¬onship. In the 150 lb. class, MarkNootens pinned his finals opponentfrom Ripon, and Gene Shin won the 190lb. class handily with two period falls.Freshman Quentin Paquette andSteve Lau claimed second place fin¬ ishes, and Don Elsenheimer collected athird.Coach Leo Kocher felt that the team“performed close to our potential inthis tournament, but seven wrestlersjust weren’t enough to win it.”Kocher also feels that the Universityof Chicago, Monmouth, and Cornell arethe top three contenders for the confer¬ence crown that will be awarded herethis weekend. Kocher said that “we canlook to place six or seven people, but Idon’t know if we can place them highenough to win it.”Last year, the team placed sevenpeople, but those seven places includedthree championships. With Karl Liet-zan and Tim Bachenburg out with inju¬ries, the only returning champ sure tobe in the meet is Shin. Given his perfor¬mance this year, he is a shoe-in to keephis own crown, but the team as a wholewill be hard pressed to do as well as itdid last year. Kocher mentioned thatCornell is ranked 15th in the nationwideDivision III polls, and that the entireconference is stronger, so it will takeanother great showing for the squad topull this one off.Midwest ConferenceWrestling ChampionshipsSaturday, Feb. 18Henry Crown Field HouseOn the Man Basketball Court9:30-12:30 Semifinals and quarterfinals3-6 p.m. Finals, ConsolationsPHOTO SV AKA JELALIANThe University of Chicago hosts the other wrestling teams from around theMidwest Conference — including nationally ranked Cornell College — Saturdayat the Field House, as the Maroon try to defend their Conference title from lastyear.Sports Calendar>poiWoi/omen’s Indoor Track — Wednesday, Feb. 15, Women’s Open Meet, at HCFH7 p.m.Men’s Indoor Track - Thursday, Feb. 16, vs. Wabash College, Wheaton Col¬lege, and Beloit College, 6 p.m., at HCFH.Men’s and Women’s Swimming - Tuesday, Feb. 14, at the University of Illi¬nois, 4 p.m.12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984V- »sf.W!»sv wasUp-and-coming fencers face tough Big Ten scheduleBy Anthony CashmanThe U of C fencing team, under theguidance of former Australian Olympi¬an Graeme Jennings, are dueling theirway to prominence. The team has un¬dergone an improvement that hastaken them from a losing, inex¬perienced team to a Big Ten competi¬tor.The team began its season on Jan. 21,in a meet at Northwestern. There theyfaced stiff competition from Northwes¬tern, Notre Dame, Illinois, MichiganState, Minnesota, and Wisconsin (Ma¬dison). The competition overwhelmedthem, as they failed even to win a strip.(A strip consists of nine bouts in aweapon, i.e. the three fencers in aweapon from one team fence each ofthe three fencers from an opposingteam).“We fenced some tough opponents.Notre Dame is ranked number two inthe country and Illinois is top in the BigTen,” said epee captained BradMarine.Despite the big losses, the team wasoptimistic. After the meet A1 Schultz,captain of the foil, remarked, “the feel¬ing on the team is that with added ex¬perience we will be able to put some¬thing together not only next year butalso this year.”The following week in Madison at theUniversity of Wisconsin, the U of Cfencers did not fare much better on thescorecard. Nevertheless, the teamshowed a vast improvement over theprevious week. The foil team took astrip, in spectacular fashion, againstMinnesota. The team came from be¬hind to win it, 5-4, on freshman TonyMason’s victory.Mason also fought back from a 4-0deficit in a bout against a Wisconsinfencer, only to lose 5-4.Last week at the Henry Crown FieldHouse, the fencing team made a quan¬tum leap and acquired its first team victory. The team beat Purdue, as theepee team won 7-2 and the foil teamwon 6-3. Although the sabre team lost,their losses did not offset the victoriesof the other two teams. The team alsofenced very well against MichiganState, as the Chicago epee took a stripfrom them. The Spartans had crushedthem only a few weeks earlier.Coach Jennings commented,“There’s been a tremendous improve¬ment in the last few weeks; we’re get¬ting experience, and the more we get,the better we get.” When asked aboutthe wins, Jennings remarked that hewas not even sure his team would winany strips this year. “Things are goingbetter than I expected. It’s been a veryMen’s hoopsBy Frank LubyRipon failed to score in the final tenseconds Saturday afternoon, allowingthe University of Chicago men’s var¬sity basketball team to capture its sev¬enth conference win in its last eighttries, 63-62, over the Redmen atRipon.Tom Redburg grabbed the reboundof the final Ripon shot, which DaveWitt had partially blocked, and heldonto it to run out the remaining time.“We were in control most of thegame,” said Maroon head coach JohnAngelus, who added that the Maroons“didn’t play a great game defensively,and didn’t have the discipline to blowthem (Ripon) apart.”Angelus also cited rebounding as animportant factor in the game, as theMaroons outrebounded Ripon, 32-22,with Witt, Redburg, and center KeithLibert swiping eight each.Chicago forced Ripon out of its zonedefense early in the game, helped byRedburg’s shooting, as the freshmanforward hit four of six shots from the pleasant surprise.”The feeling among the teammembers is equally high. Mason com¬mented, “When we started out, I hadno idea what was going on. We’ve comea hell of a long way.”Marine agreed. “Michigan State bru¬talized us several weeks ago, and wecame back and almost won last week.That’s a far cry (from where wewere).”The Maroons are looking towardnext year, while finishing up its meetsthis season. The team will lose only oneman at the end of the year, Brian Selbyof the epee squad. Selby, incidentally,leads the team in victories with a .500record. Everyone on the team stressesfloor to open things up. When Angeluswent with a two guard offense he re¬ceived some good work from freshmanguard Mike Clifford also, and Cliffordsank 4-for-5 from the free throw linewhen the Maroons entered their stall.The refereeing became an issue asthe game developed, as Chicago for¬ward Nick Meriggioli fouled out earlyin the game, with most of his fouls com¬ing on charges. That forced Angelus toinsert John Froschauer into the lineup,and Froschauer responded with “agood game defensively” whenmatched up against Ripon’s top scorer,Tom Reader.Chicago broke the game open some¬what in the second half, and picked upa big enough advantage to withstandRipon’s eventual comeback. They didwith what Angelus calls a “reflex” de¬fense, to offset Ripon’s use of the popu¬lar “flex” offense.“It really confused them for aboutfour minutes,” remarked Angelus. Theflex works against man-to-man de¬fense, and the reflex, a variation of a the long-term goals of the program. “Ashort-term improvement programnever works. We’re looking for a broadbase,” said one team member. “It’s agreat program for freshmen to get in¬volved in now because it’s an up andcoming program.”Coach Jennings plans to hold openfencing sessions this spring for teammembers and any beginners who areinterested. The sessions will include in¬struction.The team’s next tournament is atHCFH on Feb. 25, when the Maroonshost Northwestern, Michigan, and Wis¬consin (Parkside).match-up zone, prevents it from work¬ing properly, but is hard to notice.“That gave us the lead we needed towin,” said Angelus.Chicago’s bench got involved at thispoint, rhythmically chanting “WorkHarder” and according to Angelus itaffected the game, for apparently thefact that the Maroon bench was stand¬ing and chanting broke Ripon’s concen¬tration and forced them to complain inan effort to sit Chicago down.“The bench responded with tremen¬dous team spirit,” said Angelus.Rob Omiecinski and Witt had 13points apiece to lead the Maroons,while Reader finished with 18 forRipon.Chicago faces St. Norbertin GreenBay on Friday, with a chance to knockoff the conference’s top team. St. Nor-bert comes off of a double overtime,73-72 victory over Beloit this weekendin Beloit, to move two games ahead ofthe Buccaneers with three remainingA complete preview of the game willappear in Friday’s Maroon.‘Reflex' Redmen, 63-62I THE ORGANIZATION OF BLACK STUDENTSPresentIGIL SCOTT-( HERON( FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 248:00 p.m.MANDEL HALLSTUDENTS $7.00 (Limit2tickets/UCID)NON-STUDENTS $8.50All tickets on sale at REYNOLDS CLUB BOX OFFICE 962-7300Student tickets on sale TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14Non-Student tickets on sale FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17Visa & MasterCard acceptedThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984—13CAMPUS FILMS mmmTUESDAYCommittee on Arms Control & Disarmament; Meet¬ing, 7pm, Ida Noyes Lounge.Calvert House: Investigation into Catholicism7pm.Crossroads: Museum Outing, Shedd Aquarium.1pm, meet at Crossroads. $2.Career and Placement: Peace Corps, Pre-recruitinginformation meeting. 4pm, Reynolds Club, 201.Sign-up.DOC: Mooafield, 8pm. Cobb $2.Hillel: Israeli Folkdancing at Ida Noyes, 8pm. Mi¬drash Class, 8pm.WEDNESDAYLSF: Animal Crackers, 8:30pm, Law School, $2.DOC: A Midsummer Night's Dream. 8pm, Cobb,*2.Oriental Institute Lecture, Words on Stone: Recov¬ering the Literature of Anciant Egypt in Chicago,8pm, Breasted Hall.SAO Jazz Band High Noon Concert: 12-l:30pm,North Lounge Reynolds Club.Career and Placement: Life After Graduation, 12noon, Robie House.The Other Theater Group: Volpone, 8pm, 1st FloorTheater Reynolds Club.Women’s Union Meeting, 6:30pm, Ida Noyes.Career and Placement: Proctor and Gamble Distri¬buting Company, Reynolds Club 201. Sign-up. Crossroads: English, 2pm. Social Hour, 3:30. Begin¬ning German, 7pm.Badminton Club, 7:30, Ida Noyes Gym.Biochemistry Seminar: DNA Supercoiling and DNATopoisomerases, 4pm, CLSC 101.English &. Scottish Country Dance, 8pm, Ida NoyesHall.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion followed by Breakfast, 8am. CarillonRecital and Tower Tour, 12:15.THURSDAYRockfeller Chapel: Choral Vesper Service, 5:15Choral Vesper Service, 5:45pm, Chancel Choir Ser¬vice.Art Department: Discussion of Career Opportuni¬ties in Art History, Selma Holo, Director of FisherGaller, UNSC. 10am, CWAC 156.Hillel: Advanced Talmud Class, 5:30pm.CAUSE: 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Center for Far Eastern Studies: Merchants and Pea¬sants in the Wuxi Silk Industry, 1870-1949 3:30-5pm.Music Department: Noontime Concert, Julia Twien,piano. 12:15pm, Goodspeed Recital Hall Free.German Club: STAMMTISCH, German Conversa¬tion Table, 9pm, C-Shop.LSF: Camille, 8:30, Law School, $2.DOC: The Tall Target, 8pm, Cobb. $2.I-House Film Society, Last Year at Marienbad, 7:30,9:30. $2.The Other Theater Group: Volpone, 1st Floor The¬ater Reynolds Club. Moonfleet (Fritz Lang, 1955) In Moon-fleet, Lang creates an elaborate swash¬buckler with a depth and darkness rarefor the genre. Stewart Granger stars asa British nobleman who takes to thehigh seas as a buccaneer; the greatJoan Greenwood is also featured in thisrich and often chilling tale of adven¬ture and destiny. Tues., Feb. 14 at 8p.m. DOC. $2. —MKAnimal Crackers (Victor Heerman,1930) The Marx Brothers second fea¬ture together borrowed slavishly fromtheir hit Broadway version (by GeorgeKaufman and Robert Ryskind), and, inretrospect, seems more stageboundand lethargic than any of their subse¬quent Paramount productions (Mon¬key Business, Horse Feathers, andDuck Soup). Even so, it’s a hands-downimprovement over Coconuts, and, withthe obvious exception of A Night at theOpera, proved zanier and more anar¬chic than anything they would eventu¬ally produce for Leo B. Mayer. WithMargaret Dumont, Lillian Roth, andCaptan Jeffrey “T-as-in-Edgar”Spaulding. Wed., Feb. 15 at 8:30 p.m.LSF $2 -PFA Midsummer Night’s Dream (Wil-lian Dieterele and Max Reinhardt,1935) Last week, in Kozintsev’s KingLear, we saw Shakespeare in the Sovi¬et Union; this week we see Shake¬speare interpreted in the style of an-other totalitarian regime:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the thirties.The cast includes James Cagney, Oli¬via De Havilland, Joe E. Brown, DickPowell, Mickey Rooney, and others toonumerous to mention; the direction isby the German master of spectacle,Max Reinhardt, with an assist from theredoubtable Dieterele (MGM didn’twant mad Max to go too far in his firstbig-budget Hollywood movie). Some ofit works, some of it doesn’t, but it’sworth a look, if only to see an early per¬formance by Hollywood’s favorite out-of-the-closet skeleton rattler, KennethAnger. Wed., Feb. 15 at 8 p.m. DOC. $2-MKThe 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.Frank LubySports EditorJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorArthur U. EllisPhotography EditorKC MorrisPhotography EditorPurnima DubeyAssistant Features EditorAssociate Editors: Kahane Corn, Hilary TillStaff: Edward Achuck, Michael Aronson, Rosemary Blinn, Phil Cafaro, Anthony Cash-man. Maxwell Chi, Shong Chow, Wally Dabrowski, Pat Finegan, Paul Flood, Joel Geffin,Philip Glist, Audrey Guzik. Don Haslam, Keith Horvath, Cathy LeTourneau, Jeff Makos,Ravi Rajmane. Leah Schlesinger, Nathan Schoppa, Geoff Sherry, Koyin Shih, EllynStreed. Jim Thompson, Bob Travis, Michelle Ward.Anna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorMichael ElliottNews EditorSondra KruegerFeatures Editor Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerCampbell McGrathChicago Literary Review Editor Accattone (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1961)is an unsentimental slice of life film ofwhat it is like to live in a Rome slum.Though reminiscent of the great Ita¬lian neo-realistic work of Rosselini andDe Sica, this work stands out for itssparse, yet untheatrical style and tone.Pasolini was hailed as Director of theYear in 1970 by the International FilmGuide. (Accattone replaces Last Yeatat Marienbad which was withdrawnfrom distribution.) Thurs., Feb. 16 at7:30 and 9:30! p.m. InternationalHouse. $2 —BTThe Tall Target (Anthony Mann, 1947):A triumph of early Mann. Abe Lincolnis the target. Can he be saved? There’smore suspense than you’d imagine pos¬sible. Thurs., Feb. 16 at 8 p.m. DOC. $2.-MKCamille (George Cukor, 1936) Garboversus Consumption. Sublime! WithRobert Taylor (in his first romanticrole), a score by Herbert Stothart, andan outrageously villainous Henry Dan¬ielle. Thurs., Feb. 16 at 8:30 p.m. LSF.$2 -PFSTANLEY H. KAPLAN UslEDUCATIONAL CENTER„ February ClassesSPEED READING...MCAT...DAT...4WK/GMAT/LSAT/SAT/ACT...March ClassesGRE...SAT...MCAT...DAT...P«£PABE roeMCAT * SAT * lSAT • GMAT • GREGRE PSYCH * GRE BtO * OCAT • VAT * MATINTRODUCTION TO LAW SCHOOL • SPEEO READINGSSAT*PSAT*DAT ACHIEVEMENTS*ACT#CPATOEFL * MSKP * NM0 1 11 111 • ECFMG • FLEXN-CLEX*CGFNS*FMGEMS*NPB l*ESl*NC8 1SWING, SUMNER. FALL MTENSNESCourses constantly updated flexibleprograms and hours Visit any center andsee for yourself wtiv we make medifference Speed Reading Coursefeatures Free Demo lesson—Cali tordays & timesPmpwwton SptmMB mca '938ARLINGTON HEIGHTSCHICAGO CENTERHIGHLAND PARKLAGRANGE CENTER 312 437-6650312 764-5151312 433-7410312 352-5640OuWkNV SUM Omy CM Ton Free «00 22] ira2Cwrmn m Mapr u S CRM Puerto fNcc Toronto Caned#Chicago Literary Reviewwants your short fiction,poetry, drama, criticism, andreviewsDeadline: FEBRUARY 29Drop submissions in the CLRbox in the Maroon office,Ida Noyes Hall, Room 303• Get Literary! • Apartment Shopping?Choice Hyde Park Locations![—5134 S. Harper—1 bedroom, 1 bath, stove,refrigerator, heat and hotwater furnished.$400.00 month, adultsonly, no pets.—55th & Everett—4 room, 1 bedroom, livingroom, dining room andkitchen, heat, hot water,stove and refrigerator,furnished.$410.00 month, adultsonly, small pet ok.—5212 Cornell2.5 room and studioapartments available forimmediate occupancy,heat, hot water, electric,and cooking gas includedin rent. Stove andrefrigerator, furnished.$290.00 month, adultsonly, no pets. —55th & Everett—3.5 room, 1 bedroom, living room, dining room,kitchen and dinette,heat, hot water, stoveand refrigerator, furnish¬ed.$360.00 month, adultsonly, small pets ok.5100 Consult1monthStove,I lllllll 5120 S. Harper-2.5 room3.5 room$275.00 month$360.00 monthStove, refrigerator,heat and hotwater, furnished.The Sack Realty Company, Inc.1459 east hyde park boulevardChicago, Illinois 60615 * 684-890014—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984SPACE5464 Harper 2'/z & 3'/2 room apartmentsavailable call Parker-Holsman 493-2525 for in¬formation. PEOPLE WANTEDHealthy non-smoking paid volunteers soughtfor research info fhe common cold. Call 791-3713.5218-28 Woodlawn 4&5 room apts for renf Call493-2525 Parker Holsman Co.5535-41 S. Kimbark 3'/a rooms $390 Call ParkerHolsman Co 493-252554th & Woodlawn 2 bdrm apt Call Kevin Quinn493-2329 or Parker-Holsman 493-25254 room Co-op apt, well-kept court bldg. nr.campus. Usable as 2 bedroom, $16,000. 536-3881Studio IVj, 2'/a near UC 288-0718Condo For Sale2 Bdrm, Large Kitchen W/Pantry Full DR OakFirs Spacious LR 56TH And Kimbark, $58,000.Call 876-3512 OR 947-9432.Rm avlbl $147/mo. call Judy 493-5287eves.2 or 3 bedrm apt modern spacious $460/mo+util Ellis & 54th March 1 241 70965211 S Ingleside 1st fl 3'/2 rms EVERYTHINGBRAND NEW Call Bolar 326 0449.Airy Two Bedroom, Two Bath 9th Floor Condowith Lakeview for Sale. Wood Parquet Floorsin Well Maintained Building. Call Owner Days-947-4085 Healthy non smoking paid volunteers withonset of a common cold wifhin prior 24 hourssought for research project. Call 791-3713.People needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962-8859.Kenwood family seeking sitter for baby.Weekdays, 8am to 4pm. Some light housework.Job to last until late June. 373-6151, evenings.4Warm, energetic, patient student or studentwife to sit for 2 yr. old. girl in my home near50th & Cornell Tuesdays 3-6 pm 8. Thursdays 9-11am. Refs req. Call 752-6063.Need Loving Reliable sitter for two school agechildren. Part time. 241-5892 evenings.Wanted: One computer-oriented individualwith writing ability and active imagination tocreate paper games, puzzles, and brain¬teasing activities on bimonthly basis. We're acomputer games magazine with a satiricalbent, directed at the more sophisticated user.Send samples to St. Game, Box 60, NorthHollywood, CA 91603. SCENESWRITERS' WORKSHOP PL2 8377U of C Volleyball Club needs qualified players!Ida Noyes Gym. Fridays, 7:30-10:00 PM.IS SOCIALISM IMPOSSIBLE? A lecture byDavid Ramsey Steele. Discussion to follow,TONIGHT! 7:30 I House Homeroom. Presentby the South Side Libertarians. FREEDOM isthe issue!PERSONALSL.S. (AKA LITTLE ERRR) you are my oneand only-the love of my life. BE MY VALENTINE, and for now and for ever. I LOVE YOU.B.S.To the most wonderful girl in the world, mySweat Pea. How can anyone be as lucky as I tobe loved by such a beautiful, caring, andhonest person? You are the best thing that hasever happened to me! Please, always be myValentine. With love, from your most sincereadmirer-ak.To the gentleman who assisted in the soon to belegendary pursuit of Mur PH E E, THANKS.A You are indeed my lucky star and I am yoursalways. To many more wonderful years. Thesehave been two of my loveliest. Your Rudy.Paget-page: You young schnade, VALEN¬TINES from bucking chewy's spade. Dig?Room for Renf in Home of Professor. 55thStreet and Harper Ave. Kitchen privileges,utility room (washer, dryer). Phone includedin rent. Lady graduate student preferred.Available: about March 15. Call evenings 324-3484.Great Apt! For rent to sublease from Mar 12bdrm, w bath apt in 56th St highrise, 2 blocksfrom I.C. $729 a mo; Includes 24 hr doorman,central heat and air. Stunning view. Call 7521081.Studio avail 5/1. Near UC Grad Stud Pref.Leave Message 241 6875. Serious inq only pis.Large room FOR RENT in big 5 bedroom co edapartment. Lake view. On B and Jeffrey bus¬lines. Graduate student preferred. MOVE INNOW. $170.00/month-Futilities. Call 869 7657.Roommate Needed, 1 Bdrm/3 Bdrm AptRegents Park, 10 FI. $230/mo Call Jerry 241-6677.Fern rmmt to share beaut 2 bdrm on Hyd PkBlvd near 55th $225 per mo grad or wkg wmn288 2622.Spacious 3 bdrm 2 bath condo with frpl, oak fl,huge lr& msbr, recently totally remodelled kitchen & bath, ideal location, 70's. 288-5775.Univ. apt 2 bedroom, 2 bathrm, in-door garage,health club, swimming pool quiet, neat 1C & coop. 10 mins walk to campus call: 324-0055.SPACE WANTEDRecent UC grad looking to assumelease/sublet studio or 1 bdrm till Aug or Septwill consider taking a room in large apt CallMike: weekdays: 962-1661 eve: 363 6986FOR SALEDodge Van for sale, Slanf six (cylinder), 15-20mpg with ladder rack. Good engine, goodtransmission, good tires. $695. Bill 493-9122FREE FILM! Receive 1 roll free for every rollyou bring in for process and print at ModelCamera 1342 E 55 493 6700 (thru Feb).Daniels, McClenny and Cannone Ent. (U.C.Poster as seen in the bookstore and the FallAlumni Magazine). Excellent opportunity forstudent entrepreneurs to get hands on ex¬perience in marketing, distribution and newproduct development of consumer goods. Call643-8933or 493-8790 for more information.US Robotics Password Direct Connect Modem.150-300, 1200 hand auto speed select. Hayescompatible. Comes w/RS232 cable. $330. Call752 5877 and leave messageFull-set (12) Spode UofC dinner plates circa1931. Perfect condition. $1000 Call weekends485-3454.WANTED2 4 drawer suspension files B Lyttle 324 0654The Closer You Get The Better We Look!Hyde Park’s Completely NewApartment ResidenceA Short Walk From The lake And:Harper Ct. • University of ChicagoThe l. C. * RestaurantsIncludes WANT A JOB YOU CAN BELIEVE IN?ACORN, a nafional grassroots communityorganization is hiring Community and LaborOrganizers. Training Provided. Summer orFulltime, CALL; 939-7489. Interviews atPlacement Office, February 24th.The Chicago Counseling and PsychotherapyCenter, 5711 S. Woodlawn, needs people whoare willing to talk about their personal problems and feelings for 10 sessions with apsychotherapist-in-training. Participationshould not be seen as psychotherapy or as asubstitute for psychotherapy, although par¬ticipants may find it a useful experience. Par¬ticipants will neither be paid nor charged fortheir sessions. Call Pat at 684-1800.WRITERS ILLUSTRATORSCARTOONISTSPositions now available for top-notch freelancers interested in working with a new fullfeatured weekly newspaper.LASALLE STREET CHRONICLE, 975-7003.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.JAMES BONE, editor-typist, 363 0522PRECISION PLUS TYPING Fast service atreasonable rates includes editing. 324 1660Anytime.Moving and Hauling. Discount prices to staffand students from $ 12/hr. With van, or helpersfor trucks. Free cartons delivered N/C Pack¬ing and Loading services. Many other services. References. Bill 493 9122.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962 6263.ARCHITECTURAL QUALITY REMODELL¬ING Reliable, neat, guaranteed on-time completion. References available. LOSETH CON¬STRUCTION CO. 363-2202.TYPING Accurate and Attractive typing onIBM Sele. II - Reports, Dissertations, Theses,Stat, Tables, etc. 667 8657PROFESSIONAL TYPING, reasonable. 6846882Passport Phto While-U-WaitModel Camera 1342 E. 55th 493-6700TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.Roosevelt Univ LSAT GMAT MCAT Prep Loop& Suburbs, Free Sample Class at 6:30-LSAT3/29, GMAT 2/15, MCAT 2/22. 341 3660MOVING SERVICE using van. Call LARRY.Lowest rates. Furniture, boxes, etc. 743-1353.WRITING A PAPER? Let wordpower type itfor you on an IBM computer. $2 50/pg, freedelivery. Editing service. 486 2683APARTMENTS nsFOR RENTGRAFF & SinCHECK jiJi1617 E. 55th St. 0Larga i2Vt, Hi4 & 6 rm.opts.S/mmee/ta/e WOccupancy \BU8-5566 Michele Sibley Happy V'day, hope it all goeswell, Love Always Your earth angel.UNICORN LOVER- your former lab partner'stoo shy to say that he thinks you're adorableGuess I'll hide under my pseudonym-The Tin¬manLaura D. Koenig my heart goes to you on thisv'day. Love Always E .A.To Michael Hill: Happy Valentines day to you....Happy Valentines Day to you...Happy Valen¬tines Day, my dear MICHAEL. I really loveyou! April.RIDESRide needed to Ann Arbor, Ml nearly anyweekend. Will share costs. Jim 363-7705, eves.HOUSESITTERResponsible 24 y/o 4th year medical studentwill housesit for you this summer—or spring orfall, for that matter. Call Scott, evenings, 241-5929REST. NIGHT MANAGERMellow Yellow is now hiring Night Manager.Good starting sal., benefits 4- career growthpotential. Must be exp and have checkablerefs. Apply 1508 E 53rd St. Ken or Eliz M F 9-11am.INSIDER'S PURCHASEExcellent investment opportunity. Ibdrm coopunits avail in small member-run building.Great location. Avg mon charge $300. Buy it for$12,000 with $2500down! Call 643-6164 evesMORTIMER MOOSEWANTS YOU to come and pet him at DU'sweekly study break-Wed 10:30. He'll give shorttalk about the co-ed frat he lives in-5714Woodlawn.ANIMAL WELFAREDee Dunhiem of Animal Public Relations willspeak on Current Actions in Animal Rights onWed 2/15 at 8pm in Cobb 107. All Welcome.npi*It means Righteousness not chanty. Tofind out what you should be doing to helpneedy Jews in Israel, Eastern Europe.Chicago, and Around the World, call 752-1127weekdays between 9 a m. & 4 p.m.February 17,1%4 8jxn International House Auditoriuml— 1ONE NIGHT ONLY!Music by Joshua HomickChoreography by Linda BenfieldDirected by Jeff PecoreTickets $3.00 at the door.• Master T. V. Antenna • New Ceramic Tile• Ind. Control Heat • New Appliances• Wall to Wall Carpeting • Night Doormen• Central Air ConditioningI Bedroom from $405 - 2 Bedroom from $5 255200S. BLACKSTONEAVE.I BLOCK WEST OF HARPER COURTlon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 12-6 Sun. I2-5 6H4-S6t PASU OUTINGThis Saturday, Feb. 18, the Polish-AmericanStudent Union will sponsor a trip to the PolishMuseum of America followed by lunch at aPolish restaurant. We will meet at the en¬trance to Regenstein at 11:30 and will return by4pm. If you wish to go, please RSVP by Fri Feb17 by calling Greg 288-3567, Amy 667-6039,MaryAnn 241-7991, or Witold 254-1296.TOO MUCH PRESSURE?Is the pressure of homework, readingassignments, problem sets too much? Don'tthink you're going to have enough time toprepare for a test? Burnt out? The Hotline iswilling to listen. You can call us seven nights aweek, 7pm-7am. Our number is 753-1777.ENJOY VARIETY?Students of all disciplines, grad andundergrad, needed to staff the UC Hotline,1984-85. Find out about spring training at an in¬fo meeting in Ida Noyes Hall: Thurs Feb 16 at8:00 pm, 2nd floor Memorial Room. Call 7531777 if you have questions.LESBEAU PARLEURSLe 2/16, James R Lawler parlera de L'lN-VITATION AU VOYAGE de Baudelaire. VenezI'ecouter a 8hrs a Ida Noyes avec Les BeauxParleurs. Pour renseignments: Lesa 947-0659.SGFC.COPYING ANDPRINTINGHi-speed & quality Xerox Duplicators gearedto Student/Faculty needs. Low prices We'refast. Quant. Disct.Copyworks 5210 Harper 288-2233.DOES YOUR MINDMATTER?It does to us. Earn money by participating instudies of left-right brain function. Right andleft-handers needed. Call 962-7591.INVESTMENT BANKINGHappy Valentines Day as every day. Meet mefor a swing (Backyard or Chinese)?? XX??XYour Unswindleable Kissy Jeanne. It reallywill be forever, you know.CAREERS IN LAWLife After Graduation, Wednesday, Feb 15. 12noon, Robie House, 5757 Woodlawn.THE GROUPGALA hosts a discussion/coffeehouse everyTues at 9pm at 5615 S. Woodlawn. Preceded at8 by informal Coming Out rap group All in¬terested men & women, old 8> new arewelcome. 962 9734TheChicagoMaroonStadeat Newspaper of theUnbcntty of ChicagoMOVIES 11 pmFeb. 14/15 Best of Second CityFeb. 21/22 Shake, Rattleand RollFeb. 28/29 The ProducersMarch 6/7 Joe JacksonConcertMarch 13/14 TommyROCK VIDEOSEach Friday Night, 11:30 pm -1 amOLYMPIC COVERAGEBig screen television viewingThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 14, 1984—15StartingTomorrow!Chez Morry will expand its seating capacityfrom 24 to 86 in an effort to make thisunique dining experience available to allwith a new, lighter gourmet luncheon menu.(s>Ae& Jktorriy JfwicAeo/i/ dTesiaA slice of prime rib roast idloa&t fSrdrte dld>- o/SAeffau fdufrit served without the bone1 on sourdough oread. With potato du jour.$6.95ddaAed f8roo£ Sraat ^FlorentineFresh, boned brook trout baked with spinach, anise, cream and Parmesan cheese. With potato du jour.$6.95f£orA Sender/mn SormandieSauteed slices of pork tenderloin served with sliced apples cooked in butter, brandy and cinnamon. With potato du jour.$5.95Saddle LorraineFresh eggs, cream, ham, swiss cheese and onion baked and served hot with a fresh salad.$4.95< feafood SuiedieFresh eggs, cream, onion, swiss cheese with fresh fish and shellfish. Served with a salad.$5.25ffyeta/de SaddleFresh eggs, cream, swiss cheese and garden fresh vegetables. Served with a salad.$4.95S^rexA dFrail SaladA delightful selection of fresh fruit served with cottage cheese.$3.95f/ardea/Sa/adFresh, crisp vegetables on a bed of lettuce.$3.95StaffedfTomafrxA red, ripe tomato stuffed with chicken, tuna, crab or shrimp salad with chefs garni.$4.95Ourevening servicewill remainunchanged.Reservationsrequested.For reservations,call Ms. Barbara Smithat 493-2270. For youradded convenience,Chez morry accepts AmericanExpress, Visa, Mastercharge andthe Chez Morry credit card. Forinformation on how you can obtain yourChez Morry credit account, call 493-2270.FINE EUROPEAN CUISINEWEST END OF HUTCHINSON COMMONS