—'" - - —The Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 37 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1984 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 21, 1984Bennett to lecture on lassitude’By Sondra KruegerGraduate humanities pro¬grams are “insignificant, life¬less, and pointless,” says Wil¬liam Bennett, director of theNational Endowment for theHumanities. Bennett willspeak this afternoon on “TheShame of the Graduate SchoolsRevisited,” at 4 p.m. in Breast¬ed Hall.Bennett, a former professorand university administrator,says “What we have is historywithout the story, ‘literary stu¬dies’ without the literature,philosophy with love or wis- are not unknown.” “Movingfrom undergraduate to gradu¬ate study should be like mov¬ing from being a college ath¬lete to a professional athlete.Instead, it frequently is likebeing transformed from a col¬lege athlete into a sports statis¬tician, if not a distant and de¬moralized spectator.”Bennett also warns, “Weneed to connect graduate studyin the humanities to life’s mostcompelling questions, or wewill watch such study disap¬pear into a richly deserved ob¬scurity.”PHOTO BY JOEL GEFFINMayor Harold Washington and Aid. LawrenceBloom (5th)Mayor supports BloomAs expected, Mayor HaroldWashington endorsed Aid.Lawrence Bloom’s (5th) bidfor Cook County state’s attor¬ney Monday. Bloom faces in¬cumbent Richard M. Daley inthe March 20 Democratic pri¬mary.Washington and Bloom havebeen close allies in recentyears; Bloom supported themovement to draft Washingtonas a 1983 mayoral candidate,and Washington endorsedBloom in a crowded field for5th Ward alderman last year.The mayor was unexpected¬ly quiet in his remarks aboutDaley. Washington has ex¬ pressed disatisfaction withDaley as his allies havealigned with Edward Vrdolyakin battles for control over thecity council and the centralcommittee of the Cook CountyRegular Democratic Organi¬zation.Washington made only twoindirect references to Daleyyesterday, though. He praisedBloom as a “candidate of thepeople,” rather than of a“crumbling machine,” andsaid Bloom would not “leavethe dirty work to the US attor¬ney” in prosecuting corrup¬tion. dom — a humanities too oftenforeign to man.”Bennett believes that thestudy of humanities shouldproduce people of understand¬ing and perspective, “butmuch graduate humanitieswork is a smorgasbord thatpresents not discernment butintellectual indifference andlassitude.”Graduate and undergradu¬ate education should have thesame goal, says Bennett: “tobe an enterprise where onelearns things worth knowing,and where passion and vitalityNewhouse, IVI need solidarityBy Cliff Grammich“I think they’re not veryopen...I’m concerned theymay not be willing to close thesocial and economic gap be¬tween black and white in thecity...I wonder if they’re will-News Analysising to make sure tax dollarsare shared equally by all citi¬zens of this city, regardless ofrace.”Statements similar to theabove appear to be a genericindictment by a black indepen¬dent politician against tradi¬tional remnants of the CookCounty Regular DemocraticOrganization — which maketheir use by Richard Ne¬whouse in analyzing the Inde¬pendent Voters of Illinois-Independent PrecinctOrganization (IVI-IPO) morel surprising.DOC: intimate and immediateThis is the first of a series ofarticles on campus filmgroups at the University.Subsequent articles will ap¬pear in the next two issuesof the Maroon.By Edward HernstadtI am leaning against the wallin a small stuffy room, watch¬ing a thin beam of light flickeron the far wall. I see strang vi¬olent activities occurring in astarkly lit, weirdly angledblack-and-white environment.I am here because a little earli¬er I asked DOC Chairman Mi¬chael Kotze about a recentshort film project, EscapeFrom Hyde Park. “Do youwant to see it?” Kotze asked,jumping up. That immediacy,that intimacy with film char¬acterizes DOC Films, just as aquiet competency and enter¬prising spirit marks LawSchool Films, and a scrappyup-and-coming attitude seemsto color the InternationalHouse Film Society. The threecampus film groups have noti¬ceably different organizationsand philosophies, but they share a love for cinema, and aconviction that they are addingsomething unique and impor¬tant to the University commu¬nity.DOC Films, The Documenta¬ry Film Group, is the Hertz ofthe film societies. The oldest —the country’s oldest, in fact,age 52 this year — the biggest,with over 150 members, andthe richest, DOC shows at leastone film every day to anaverage of over 2500 viewers aweek. The group has a historyof showing obscure and, per¬haps, daring films. “We bringmovies to campus that youcan’t really see anywhereelse,” Jeff Makos, editor oflast year’s Focus! magazinesaid.Ted Shen, a DOC alumnus,recently chronicled thegroup’s history in the “Univer¬sity of Chicago Magazine.”Shen pointed out that in the1950’s, when avant-gardedirectors like Kenneth Anger,Stan Vanderbreek, and MayaDeren weren’t commerciallyavailable, DOC brought themto campus. A decade laterDOC was helping to spotlightinsideZonis rebukedpage 4Norbert basketballpage twelve attention on director FrankBorzage, Jerry Lewis, and the“B” movies, these latter in thegroup’s journal Focus! Thisjournal was the high-point ofwhat Shen called Doc’s “gold¬en age” — a period when suchpresent film critics as DaveKehr and Myron Meisel, anddirector Aaron Lipstadt (An¬droid) helped make the nation¬wide magazine one the moreimportant critical forums inthe country. “That was a timewhen DOC really began to dowhat it does,” said Kotze aboutthe decade between 1965 and1975.The concerns that markedDoc Films then — a belief inthe primacy of the director anda desire to bring important cin¬ema personalities in additionto their hard-to-find films tocampus — still drives thegroup. “DOC has always beenauteuristically influenced; weare more concerned with thedirector than with the actors orthe genre,” Kotze explained,“and we like to present a co¬herent theme, a series thatshows something about adirector’s style, about film.”The tradition of a weekly,series, of featuring the ouvreof a single director — AnthonyMann, e g., right now, or, occa¬sionally, the work of an icon,like Clint Eastwood, or agenre, like the upcomingseries on the silent western,over a quarter is a long onetoo. “For years, DOC was theonly group in Chicago doingthis,” Makos said. “Now youcan go to the Film Center ofthe Art Institute or FacetsMultimedia and see a spriesbut we were the first.”continued on page eight Newhouse, a state senatorfrom many years and the“father of black independentpolitics,” would seem an idealally for IVI — he’s a long-timeliberal independent, was an in¬dependent candidate formayor in 1975 (against WilliamSinger, now an ally of EdwardVrdolyak, and Richard J.Daley, who had the endorse¬ment of then-State Sen. HaroldWashington), and for yearshas toiled to present indepen¬dent alternatives to Chicago’sblack constituency.Yet the relationship betweenthe two has become strained inrecent years. A clear demon¬stration of this was Ne-whouse's recent refusal to seekthe endorsement of IVI in hisupcoming re-election bid.Although Newhouse will winre-election easily, as he is un¬opposed, it must come as aN shock to local observers of in¬dependent politics that he re¬fused to seek IVI backing.State Rep. Carol MoseleyBraun (D-25), a Newhouseally, is also unopposed, but stillsough IVI backing to unitylocal independent efforts.Newhouse, however, haschosen to disregard what hecalls IVI’s “rude, hostile, anddemeaning” endorsement ses- as a result of these things, andwhat I see the endorsementsbecoming and what I see theorganization becoming,” Ne¬whouse told the Maroon lastweek.The most recent source ofNewhouse’s wrath at IVIcomes from IVI’s failure tosupport Newhouse’s lawsuitagainst the General Assemblyremap originally proposed.Newhouse’s lawsuit eventuallyredrew lines to what he be¬lieves is a more “equitable”map.“The lawsuit increased by 50percent the opportunity forblack and independent leader¬ship in this city,” he said. “Thelawsuit opened the way for Hi-spanics for the first time to getinto the political process.”Newhouse had charged the1970 map was also discrimina¬tory, but he failed to obtainchanges in it. The senator thenprepared for a 1980 fight for amap he believed would bemore equitable.Newhouse filed suit againstthe original proposed 1980remap, yet IVI failed to joinhis efforts, a decision hetermed a “crowning absurdi¬ty.”“When you’re knocking thelawsuit, you’re knocking theRichard Newhousesions, due to a litany of com¬plaints he has against the orga¬nization. This includes IVl’sfailure to support his lawsuitagainst a “discriminatory”1980 General Assembly reap¬portionment; IVI’s lack ofwork for social and racialchange besides “providing afew troops at election time”;the group’s failure to reach outmore extensively to the blackcommunity; and his fear of re¬cent alliances by white inde¬pendents with “old remnantsnf thp regular organization ”“My decision not to attendthe endorsement session came PHOTO BY KC MORRIScommunity and a largelyblack constituency,” he said.Newhouse believes IVI’swork for blacks also needs tobe strengthened socially. Henotes many black indepen¬dents. including those workingin his office, “haven’t just beeninvolved with electoral poli¬tics. We’ve worked to close thesocial and economic gapswhich separate blacks andwhites in the city and righthere in Hyde Park. Withoutclosing these gaps, the politi¬cal progress doesn’t mean athing.”continued on page sevenJoin us Mondaythrough Friday fora gourmet luncheon!Chez Morry now offers a lighter,gourmet lunch menu of the finequality you’ve come to expect.You’ll choose from an appetizingselection of Chez Charles’ excellentquiches, salads and lunch-sizeentrees that include prime rib,brook trout and pork tenderloin. . . reasonably priced from $3.95to $6.95, your choice of tea orcoffee included.With expanded seating!We’ve more than tripled ourseating capacity in an effortto make this uniquedining experienceavailableto all.Oureveningservice remainsunchanged.lte*?rvationsrequt sted.For reservations,call Ms. Barbara Smithat 493-2270. For you*added convenienceChez Morry accepts AmericatExpress, Visa, Mastercharge amthe Chez Morry credit card Fo.information on hou you can obtain youChez Morry credit account, call 493-227110% discount to Chamber Music Series patrons withtickets the eve of performance.FINE EUROPEAN CUISINEWEST END OF HUTCHINSON COMMONSBLACK GRADUATE FORUMpresentsVincent HardingHistorian, Civil Rights Activist,Human Rights ActivistonTHE PHOENIXThe Black Future in AmeriaSunday, February 263:30 p.m.Ida Noyes LibraryA Soul Food Taster to FollowFunded by SGFC and the Danforth-Compton Fund wmafter!a conference orsanized by the center for Latin American studies at theUniversity of Chicaso10:00 a.m.1:15 p.m. “The U.S. and Cuba"Speaker: Wayne Smith, member of the U.S. Dept, of State& Head of the U.S. Interest Section in Cuba durins Carter’sadministration.“The Revolution in Cuban Cinema"Speaker Richard Pena, Director of the Film Center of theArt Institute of Chicago.2:30 p.m. “Cuba and the U.S.“Speaker: Ramon Sanchez Parodi, Head of the Cuban In¬terest Section, Washington, D.C.4:15 p.m. “U.S. Policy, the Cuban Revolution, and the Future"Speaker: Max Azicri, Professor of Political Science Edin-boro University of Pennsylvaniaa complete schedule and listing of chairs and commentators isavailable at the Center for Latin American Studies (ss 204);1126 E. 59th St.; Chicago, IL 60637; (312) 962-8420FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 UNIV. of CHICAGOINTERNATIONAL HOUSE, 1414 E. 59th ST ♦jj’MUsIOMUsIOMUsIC^CJ THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT of MUSIC §Presents:3ETCJ^T) Thursday, February 24 • University Chamber Choir12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallRodney Wynkoop, conductorJay Rosenblatt, accompanistMusic of Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms (op. 92 & 93),and Charles-Vleritin Alkan (“Funeral March on the Death ofa Parrot ”)Admission is free. Black dress is optional.Sunday, February 26 - University Chamber Orchestra8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallElaine Scott Banks, conductorJ.C. Bach: Sinfonia in C Major, op.3, no.2; Stamitz: SinfoniaConcertante in D Major (Carole Cloud, violinist; DanMcDonald, violist); J.S. Bach: Brandenburg Concert No.3 inG Major; Handel: Concerto in G minor for oboe (JosephClaude, soloist); F.J. Haydn: Symphony No. 7 in C Maor,“Le Midi”.Admission is free oCsXC.-T——» LrinUPCOMING EVENTS ♦>u Thusday, March 1 - Iris String Quartet8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallEvan Paris and Sandra Schwarz, violins; Laurel Wells, viola;Elaine Scott Banks, cello.Music of Mozart, Shostakovich, and Dvorak.Admission is free.Friday, March 2 • Contemporary Chamber Players8:00 p.m., Mandel HallRalph Shapey, directorSchubel and Tannenbaum.Admission is free. Xo CLLnT nSaturday, March 3 • University Symphony Orchestra8:30 p.m., Mandel HallBarbara Schubert, conductorBeethoven: Overture to Fidelio, op.72; Rachmaninoff: DerToteninsel (Isle of the Dead), op.29; Shostakovich:Symphony No.1 in F minor, op. 10; Tschaikovsky: Trio inA minor, op.50.Donations requested. CjCJ& Sunday, March 4 - Collegium Musicum Motet Choir8:00 p.m., Bond ChapelJeff Dean, director.With Musique de Joye and other guest instrumentalist.Music for the Medici Popes.Admission is free. Cnn^ M'JSlOMUSlC^MUsIC^2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984On Greenham womenDr. Gwynneth Kirk, a leader of theBritish movement to halt deploymentof the cruise and Pershing II missiles,will speak on campus Friday. Kirk willdescribe the history of the GreenhamCommons movement: a coalition ofwomen peace activists who have main¬tained permanent campsites at mili¬tary bases where the missiles are beingdeployed.Kirk will also discuss the spread ofthis strategy to the United States aswell as the women’s attempt to stop thedeployment of the missiles by filing alawsuit against the United States gov¬ernment. Kirk has produced severalfilms about the movement and has co¬authored a book entitled GreenhamWomen Everywhere.Kirk’s talk, sponsored by the Com¬mittee on Arms Control and Disarma¬ment, will be in Harper 130 at 4:30p.m.PeaceNow speakerGary Brenner, a member of the na¬tional council of the Peace Now Move¬ment in Israel, will speak on the Israeliperception of peace activism in Ameri¬ca and discuss other issues related tothe Israeli peace movement, Wednes¬day at 8 p.m. in Hillel House, 5715 S.Woodlawn Ave.The presentation is sponsored by Ac¬tivists for a Progressive Israel, a newgroup in Hyde Park working towardspeace in Israel.Student film awardsThe FOCUS (Films Of Chicago andUniversity Students) Awards Programis looking for entries for its eighth an¬nual competition. Sponsored by NissanMotor Corporation in USA, the Pro¬gram will award $60,000 in cash prizesto 18 students in six categories: live-ac¬tion/narrative film, documentary film,screenwriting, animation/experimen-tai film, sound achievement, and filmediting.The FOCUS program was estab¬lished tu help talented young people break into the world of filmmaking bygiving the winning works exposure tosome of Hollywood’s top leading pro¬ducers, directors, actors, and agents.Winners are flown to Los Angeles forfive to six days of informal study,which culminate in an award ceremonyat which time the winning films areshown.Entries are due April 20. For infor¬mation, rules, and entry forms writeFOCUS, 1140 Avenue of the Americas,New York, NY, 10036.Diabetes discussionAdults with diabetes and parents ofchildren with diabetes are invited to at¬tend a self-help discussion group spon¬sored by the South Suburban Branch ofthe American Diabetes Association(ADA) Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in theFlossmoor Village Hall.Rosita Butler, a diabetic and groupleader, encourages members to sharecommon concerns and problems. Thegroup meets the fourth Wednesday ofevery month. There is no charge or reg¬istration to attend. For further infor¬mation call the ADA at 346-1805.Mass at HadassahLenore E. Mass will be the featuredspeaker at a meeting of the NeuritGroup of Hadassah, Wednesday inHyde Park. Her talk, “Israeli Women:Deflating Some Myths,” will be fol¬lowed by a group discussion.The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m.and all interested women are invited.For location and information, call461-7602.CorrectionThe article on the tuition fee increasewhich appeared in Friday’s Marooncontained an incorrect reference to theathletic facilities fee. The $18 athleticfacilities fee will be included in tuition,as in the past. The fee for a locker,which is $15 in Bartlett and $20 inHCFH, will be charged separately. TheMaroon regrets the error.THE FORUM FOR LIBERAL LEARNINGPRESENTSA Conversation with Recent Winners of the Quantrell AwardHOW DO WE KNOW WHEN WE ARE SUCCESSFUL ?Assessment of Competency and Literacyin College EducationEDWARD D. GARBER Professor. Department of Biology and in the CollegeJANEL M. MUELLER Professor, Department of English Language andLiterature. Committees on General Studies in theHumanities and Art and Design, and in the CollegeJOHN MACALOON Assistant Professor of Social Sciences in the Collegeand Co-Director. Center tor Curricular ThoughtROBERT L. ASHENHURST Professor. Graduate School of Business and Marshallof the University. ModeratorFriday, February 24-Pick Hall Ground Floor Lecture 4:00 pmRoom and Lounge Laboratory School Development CommitteeLab School dinnerThe First Annual Dinner Dance spon¬sored by the Parents Association of theU of C Lab Schools will be held March 9at the Hyatt Regency Hotel. Proceedswill be donated to the Lab Schools aspart of the Association’s efforts to raise$80,000 for this year’s Operating Bud¬get.To make reservations, call AliceSchlessinger at 962-9450.Grad research abroadA meeting for all graduate studentsinterested in applying for special over¬seas dissertation research fellowshipswill be held Feb. 27 in Swift Com¬mons.The fellowships are intended to pro¬vide support to students (US citizensand permanent residents only) whowill be financing dissertation researchabroad through loans, personal sav¬ings, and/or small grants. In 1983-84grants ranged from $600 to $2000. Themaximum grant available is $2000 butmost will be smaller. Applications will be judged on the need to go abroad to doresearch, the feasibility of the project,and financial need.To be eligible for a grant in 1984-85 astudent must have completed allcourse work for the degree by June,1984; have an approved dissertationtopic and been admitted to PhD candi¬dacy by Nov. 1, 1984; be eligible for apro forma registration during theperiod abroad; and plan to begin re¬search overseas no later than Jan. 1,1985.All students interested in applyingfor these funds either for 1984-85 or infuture years are invited to attend themeeting in Southh Asia Commons. Ap¬plications will be available at the meet¬ing and thereafter from the student’sDean of Students. Applications will bedue in early April.Calvert receptionCalvert House will hold a faculty-student reception Friday at 7:30 p.m.at 5735 S. University Ave. All studentsand faculty are invited to attend. Re¬freshments will be served.fyde fM < Poetiy Series-* R<\fp6 (fobusftL*Prvf (LiSSiCS t Gwp. Cit* “bwofiftiusAmtr cf {I\y)ecs* &\reo fyiwPoet Q\for of jVimApmu ^TSixrs., tel5®, 6pm.57?1301m-ttooThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. February 21, 1984—3Iflllf llMiMW # livfCAMPUS VOICE W'. n * : > .Middle East ‘expert’ leaves professor unenlightenedBy C.M. Naim Khomeini regime could take over. He expressed con- Prof. Zonis concluded by stating that the SovietsOn Sunday, February 12, Professor Marvin Zonis cern about “the extreme pressure it would put on have become a reluctant partner in the adventurismspoke as an expert on Islam, the Middle East and the Jordan and the oil-exporting Arab countries.” Again of the Syrians. They see potential opportunities andSoviet Union. It was indeed an “expert” perfor- Israel was kept out of the discussion, perhaps be- dangers but, according to Prof. Zonis, have gone somance, for he managed to speak for 45 minutes on cause of bombing the nuclear research facilities in far down the road with the Syrians that they cannotthe subject of “New Dimensions of War and Peace in Iraq, Israel has already shown what it is capable be a moderating influence. It would have been illu-the Middle East” without once mentioning the Israel- 0f. minating if Prof. Zonis had also made some compar-Palestine conflict. Perhaps he was fashionably con- The greater part of Prof. Zonis’s remarks was de- ative remarks concerning the US-Israel ties. Per-cerned only with the “new.” Unfortunately, there voted to Lebanon and, as he so elegantly put it, haps he genuinely feels that the US can be awas nothing new about what he said; his remarks “What is Assad up to?” He viewed Lebanon as exclu- moderating influence even if it (a) pays for Israeliwere merely slightly disingenous. sively an arena for competition between the United wars in cash and kind, (b) allows Israel’s continuedProf. Zonis’s argument went as follows. States, on one side, and the Soviet Union and Syria, occupation of the Golan Heights, (c) does nothing to1. The Soviets have suffered a number of setbacks on the other. Please note that Israel was completely end Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and the con-abroad, just as they are having a hard time at home. left out of the picture. You wouldn’t have guessed struction of Iraeli settlements, (d) allows AmericanThis makes them anxious to inflict some humiliation from his remarks that Israel invaded Lebanon in Jews to settle in the occupied West Bank, and (e) ref-on the United States. 1982 and still occupied one-third of the country. He uses to have either formal or informal relations with2. One area where the Soviet Union is likely to seek further saw in Lebanon a situation where a “client the Palestinians.to do just that is the Middle East, particularly state,” i.e., Syria, was “calling the tune” at the cost One is, however, compelled to deduce that Prof.(a) in the Iran-Iraq war, and of its “patron” state, i.e., the Soviet Union, and Zonis would like the US to be much more than a mo-(b) in Lebanon. threatening to drag it into a bigger mess “in the derating influence. He called the recent withdrawal3. Syria, a “client state of the Soviet Union,” is same sense as the United States allowed itself to be of the Marines “a disastrous diplomatic defeat” in-“calling the tune” in Lebanon and may possibly drag in Iran.” (No, you were wrong if you throught that flicted by Assad on President Reagan. He furtherits “patron” into a direct confrontation with the Unit- Prof. Zonis would give the example of Israel.) In said that any UN units sent in to replace the presented States. Iran, according to him, “the Shah said, ‘Don’t put multinational force “will not be able to challenge4. The recent withdrawal of the Marines was a pressure on me. When I leave there will be chaos.’ Assad.” In other words, he would have preferred the“disastrous diplomatic defeat” for the United And there was chaos.” Sometimes the words draw United States to become a much more active parti-States. attention not to what they say but to what has been san. (Whose partisan? Of the Phalange? . OfAs an expert on the Soviet Union, Prof. Zonis re- left out. Israel?)galed his audience with tidbits about the Soviet “de- When he turned his full attention to “What is Assad In conclusion, I would like again to raise an oldfeats” in Angola and Afghanistan and the problems up to?” Prof. Zonis was again conveniently selective, question. Why is it that when it comes to thethat the Russians are having due to increased alcoho- He explained the “divide and rule” tactics of the non-Western societies one finds experts who claimlism, high mortality rate among Russian males, the Syrians, but failed to mention their similarity to authority over everything? An expert on the Newbreakdown of health care delivery systems, and the what the Israelis had earlier done vis-a-vis the fac- Deal would never be referred to as an expert on thedemographic change which is going to make the tion of Major Haddad, various shi’ite groups, and the United States. An expert on the Weimar RepublicMuslims—an “ethnic group” according to Prof. Druse militiamen. He was upset that Assad was put- would not be called an expert on Europe. But let anZonis—the majority in the Soviet Union. He felt all ting pressure on Gemayel to make him abrogate the anthropologist or a political scientist spend somethis greatly explained the motives of the Russians. accord between Lebanon and Israel. He did not, how- time in any country in Asia or Africa and what do wePerhaps it does. By the same token, one wishes he ever, explain how Mr. Shultz in his arrogance al- get: an objective, non-partisan expert on Asia orhad said something about the sky-high inflation rate lowed himself to be manipulated by the Israelis into Africa (or both). (The United States and the W'eimarin Israel, its expanding arms industry, the effect on putting pressure on Amin Gemayel to sign an agree- Reepublic are seen to be complex, but Asia and Afri-its domestic policies of the increase in the number of ment which, with the flourish of a pen, turned an in- ca are viewed as merely problematic.) All this isthe non-European Jews, the escalating deficits in the vader into a friend. He could have pointed out that quite pardonable if it goes on as a childish game inUS budget, the threat of a recession that still looms Israel still occupies southern Lebanon and. thanks to the groves of academe, but it becomes somethinghigh, and the euphoria felt by the Reagan adminis- the May 17 accord, now will find a fraudulent excuse dangerous when such experts present their partisantration after its recent “victory” in Grenada. to hold on to that territory, if not in its entirely cer- and emotion-charged opinions from public platformsWith reqard to the Iran-Iraq war, Prof. Zonis tainly up to the so-called 25 miles safety zone. (Does and on t.v. screens,opined that the war may continue indefinitely but anyone remember what Sharon said when he C.M. Naim is an associate professor in South Asianthat Iraq may eventually lose, in which case a pro- launched his tanks?) Languages and Civilization.LETTERSMost important are the people who live thereTo the editor:Having lived on both coasts, in theNorth and South, as well as travelingthrough many points between, I canclaim a certain familiarity with eachcity, and then some, which has beendiscussed in your LETTERS section.At first this series was rather amusing.However, the entire situation has be¬come embarrassing. My embarrass¬ment derives not from the fact that MYCITY has been criticized/defended, butrather from the level of insensitivityand ignorance displayed by those whohave submitted letters to you on thissubject. Each letter demands rebuttal.Let’s try to put an end to it by showingthese eloquent letter writers the errorsof their ways.For example, I cannot deny that Godhas western roots, as Mr. Iwanaga haspointed out. After having lived there Iam entirely sympathetic to the shamethat God must feel after realizing thatMr. Iwanaga and others like him arefrom there. However, I vigorously ap¬plaud God’s solution to these shamefulroots: the San Andreas fault. It is agood thing that Mr. Iwanaga likes mid-westerners. Given the current dynam¬ics of the west coast, not to mention thestorms it had to endure recently, mostwesterners will probably be living inthe midwest or treading water. In spiteof Mr. Iwanaga and God, I have foundand truly believe that most westernersare decent people.Dallas has remained unscathed. I amnot quite sure why. It has the dubiousdistinction of being the place whereJFK was assassinated. To assert thatall the citizens of Dallas, or Texas as awhole are assassins is ridiculous. Ingeneral, I have found most Texans tobe decent and just people.New York, now there’s a rip-off townfor you. These rip-offs began when theisland of Manhatten was originally pur¬chased. And who did New York comecrawling to when it couldn’t pay itsbills,...to its suburbs...Washington, DC.God Forbid. However, the fine folks ofConnecticut managed to scrape to¬gether a loan to tide N Y over. Are thepeople of Conn, really benevolent? Per¬ haps, but smart would be a better de¬scription. They knew full well that ifNY went bust all those rip-off artistswould start migrating into their littlepiece of heaven. On a more seriousnote, anyone who has lived in NewYork long enough to get to know its citi¬zens will agree that New Yorkers arebasically decent people.It must be remembered how all thiscriticism got started. Some Jerk wasstupid enough to insult the upstandingfolks of Washington, DC (I justify myassertion that he is a jerk on thegrounds that the Maroon has recentlyhonored him). Not that Washingtoniansare above criticism. After having livedthere for a number of years, I can hon¬estly say that they probably receivemore than their fair share of it. Thiscriticism usually stems from the ac¬tions, or lack thereof, of the Senators,Congressmen, and other representa¬ tives who have been sent there. Fortun¬ately, these arrogant fools are onlypart-time inhabitants of the District.They only represent the bigger foolswho sent them there in the first place.To that extent, we are all guilty, and allthe more so if we don’t vote. Further¬more, these part-time residents do notrepresent the fine people of Washing¬ton, DC.As pointed out above, and in recentletters, one need not look too hard atany city to find its faults or points ofembarrassment. Certainly Chicago,Cleveland, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh,Miami, St. Louis, St. Paul, Denver,etc., are no different. Every city has itsown personality, and each personalitycannot and should not be judged on thebasis of one attribute; esp. its sportsteams. Nor should a city or region beevaluated on the basis of its geology,crime rate, culture, benevolence, or in¬ dustry. While l am gumy oi cnueizingcertain points of each place, the basisof my judgment, above all else, is its in¬habitants. If your intention is to findsome embarrassing point about anyplace, I am sure you will have no prob¬lem. Any jerk can do that. However, ifyou live in any place long enough, andare somewhat open-minded, you willcome to realize that each place is assimilar as the next on the basis of whatmakes it important: THE PEOPLEWHO LIVE THERE!To those who wish to continue on¬ward and downward with this battle ofthe cities serial, armed with your “Mycity can beat up yours... Oh, yeah”logic, I say go forth. You are livingproof that each city has its fair share ofnarrow, and ignorant jerks!David F. BurrelliGraduate student,SociologyToub’s education lacks breadthTo the editor:Something named David Blair Toub(allegedly a first year medical student)wrote a letter to the Maroon whichseemed to demonstrate the need for abroader liberal arts education for fu¬ture technical and scientific personnelsuch as Toub. He apparently believesthat there is no difference between con¬servatism and fascism. He claims tosupport individualism, yet maligns theEconomics Department for its “free-market” economic theories, eventhough its spiritual godfather, MiltonFriedman, is one of the most extremeproponents of individualism. Yet onegets the feeling that Toub would callFriedman, an advocate of heroin lega¬lization, a fascist!Perhaps the problem is not with thebreadth of Toub’s education but withthe innate power of his gray matter! Ifso, the thought of the U of C medicalschool admitting someone with so littleability to analyze and make basic dis¬tinctions is utterly shocking!Of course, perhaps Toub doesn’t real¬ly believe that conservatives are fa¬ scists. One economic characteristic offascism is its use of government inter¬vention to establish and maintain privi¬leged economic elites, a form of “so¬cialism for the rich.” Hence, to theextent that government regulations re¬stricting entry into the medical profes¬sions tend to raise Toub’s future dis¬counted earnings stream by screwinghis future patients, perhaps Toub’staunts of “fascist” are a way of dealingwith his own sense of guilt.After Toub’s strident smear againstThe Spectator, what a relief to readJohn Iwanaga’s and Nicholas J. Lynn’shilarious letters! What is ironic is thatTaub’s letter, while of a “serious” na¬ture, was actually less reasoned andthought provoking than the comic dia¬tribes of Iwanaga and Lynn, showing that humor need not conflict with con¬tent. To Iwanaga’s statement, “thiswas not simply the Raiders vs. the’Skins, this was East vs. West. . .” itmight be added that Timothy Leary,the famous “stand-up philosopher,”has made a similar observation. Learyin 1980 made a statement to the effectthat “all of the money and good geneshave gone South and West” so that“Whenever the Dallas Cowboys van¬quish the New England Patriots, wesee not merely a conflict between foot¬ball teams but a conflict between philo¬sophies.” Toub, it would appear, placesbets on football teams from the Peo¬ple’s Republic of Rust Belt.Robert E. JohnsonEconomics Grad. Student4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984It’s the littleextras that makethe BIG DIFFERENCE.Just ask for “All the trimmings!”at MORRY’S in Hutchinson CommonsMONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 3 to 5 p.m.“HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS”1/4 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 MORRY’S ICE CREAMWITH ANY PURCHASE OVER $6.00INCREDIBLE BUYS!MORRY’S in Hutchinson Commons only GO DIRECTLYto TEXTBOOKSIf you have not bought all of yourbooks for the Winter QuarterUNSOLD WINTER TEXTBOOKSwill be returned to the publisher afterFriday, February 24thBOOKS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED FORRETURNS AFTER EIGHTH WEEKUniversity of Chicago BookstoreTextbook Department - 2nd floor970 E. 58th962-7112THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOHN M. OLIN CENTERpresentsWILLIAM BENNETTDirector of the National Endowment for the HumanitiesTHE SHAME OF THEGRADUATE SCHOOLS REVISITEDTuesday, February 21,19844:00 p.m.Breasted Hall1155 E. 58th StreetThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984—5liar East KitchenThis Week's Luncheon Special:11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. (Tuesday-Saturday)CHICKEN W/CHINESE VEGETABLE & FRIED RICE $2.45OODLES of NOODLES!Dry Pan-Fried Noodles w/BeefSingapore Fried NoodlesDuck & NoodlesPlus other dishes, just ask!1656 E. 53rd St.*955-2200Visa, MasterCard, and American Express acceptedILLUMINATIONSChoral music on the theme of lightWilliam Byrd Mass for Four VoicesRockefeller Chapel ChoirRodney Wynkoop, DirectorSunday, February 26,1984 • 3:00 P.M.Rockefeller Chapel: 5850 South WoodlawnTickets: 962-7300Hot Dog!25<tOh Brat!just $1 for a genuineBavarian BratwurstOffer good thru March 5 after 5 pmScientists have long ques¬tioned the notion that junkfood ruins brain cells. But,why take a chance? At ida'scafe, we offer you only fresh,delicious food that will stimu¬late your mind and body.After all, a well-fed mind willwork for you!i's cafe(in Ida Moyes Hall)8:30am to 8pm, Mon.-friClosed Sat. & Sun. HILLEL CINEMA PRESENTS2 FILMS!ISAAC SINGER’S NIGHTMARE ANDMRS. PUPKO’S BEARDandYIDDISH: THE MAME-LOSHNTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 7:30 P.M.HILLEL MEMBERS $1.50 - OTHERS $2.50AT HILLEL HOUSE, 5715 WOODLAWN AVENUECOLONIAL AMERICAN8IMMCRIn honor of Washington's Birthdayat International House m t. sq* stmm* Lamb Chops Alden* E>bc| Dabu 5pareribs* Daked Chicken w/Aimonds■* Welsh Rarebit* fried flounder Almondine* Corn Chowder* hrusscl Sprouts w/Chestnuts. 224:30- 7:00With Comnlimenbrn bommi andMusic by The 7*CN/CAGO BARN DANCE CO.~ a o Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984Newhousecontinued from page oneMany IVI proponents would point tothe group’s backing of Washington’smayoral bid, and IVI’s efforts for blackindependent candidates throughout thecity, as evidence of substantial work bythe group for black progress. Ne¬whouse scoffs, though, at IVI’s timingand their total effort.“The Far South Side chapter shouldhave been organized 20 years ago,” hesaid in reference to IVI’s recent expan¬sion there. ‘For years I‘ve been goingbefore them and saying the future ofthe independent movement is in theblack community. Now, for the firsttime, there’s enough votes to put to¬gether a black independent movementwithout IVI.”Newhouse particularly fears recentwhite independent alliances with Mi¬chael Madigan, speaker of the IllinoisHouse and 13th Ward committeeman,whom Newhouse termed “an unrecon¬structed bigot.”“Madigan can’t open his mouth with¬out half of the independents sitting inhis lap,” Newhouse said. “He’s careful¬ly orchestrating things for the 1987Wyler bomb threatA man claiming to have planted abomb in Wyler Children’s Hospital de¬manded ransom in a call received justafter midnight Thursday morning by aUniversity of Chicago Operator.Chicago Police and U of C securityconducted a complete search of thehospital but no bomb was found, and nofurther steps were taken in response tothe threat.Jonathan Kleinbard, vice presidentfor University news and community af¬fairs, said “there are a few threats likethis every year, and not only forWyler’s, but for a variety of campusbuildings.”Thursday’s call is currently under in¬vestigation by the Chicago police. mayoral election. He and the regularsare out to cut our throats, and theymake no bones about it.”For all his anger at IVI and some in¬dependent elements, however, Ne¬whouse doesn’t welcome a split.“It’s a rift which shouldn’t occur be¬cause we have the same objectives,”he said. “But if it comes to that, itcomes to that.”While Newhouse seems willing toshun IVI, Braun hopes to bridge the wi¬dening gap between the senator andIVI.She is in much agreement with Ne¬whouse on the current state of IVI.Braun particularly notes IVI’s appar¬ent unwillingness to deal with blacks aspolitical equals instead of in a “mentor-patron” relationship, and what shecalled “co-opting” alliances with regu¬lar Democrats.“Madigan would call it coalitionbuilding, and on the surface it seemsOK,” she said. “But when you begin tolose your principles in these alliances,it’s co-opting.”Braun said she has hoped throughouther career to bridge the black andwhite independents, but to her dismayhas been unable to do so.The current rift may not grow widerfor a while, though. IVI is currently al¬lied strongly with the mayor, and it isdoubtful much attention will be focusedon a black and white independent riftwhile the city’s attention is focused on“council wars.”Nevertheless, Newhouse’s disen¬chantment is a symptom IVI should notignore. The Washington-Vrdolyak warswill last at least three more years, butthey will end someday. Without the pre¬sence of a city-wide political battle, in¬dependents will find it easier to sepa¬rate among themselves.The independent movement is indeedin the black community. If IVI takescoalition-building seriously, it will curethe problems causing the Newhousesymptoms. Newhouse, Braun, andothers allied with them can get alongwithout IVI. It’s doubtful the reverse istrue.M Craig Rosenbaum, David Brooks,right)Seith on WHPKUnited Democratic candidate for USSenate Alex Seith will be interviewedFeb. 23 on South Side Forum, a weeklyprogram heard at 5:30 p.m. everyThursday on WHPK.Seith will be questioned by CliffGrammich, news editor of the ChicagoMaroon and David Brooks, political ed¬itor of the Chicago Journal. Craig Ro¬senbaum, news director of WHPK, willmoderate.IHC dinner surveyThe Inter-House Council recentlycompleted a survey of students who eatthe Saturday afternoon meal in resi¬dence dining halls.Currently this meal is a dinner, andstudents pay full dinner price. The sur¬vey asked, “Are you in favor of chang¬ing the Saturday afternoon meal froma dinner to a lunch?” 401 out of 436 (92percent) responded in the affirma¬tive.The change would save those stu¬dents a significant amount of moneyand provide them with the lighterlunch fair they have requested. JohnVail, president of IHC, said, “The mostindicative statement of student opinionon this was: ‘Waking up to gravy andmashed potatoes after a Friday nightparty has to be the worst thing in theuniverse.’ ” PHOTO BY KC MORRISand Cliff Grammich (left toDavid Adler, chairman of the IHCEconomics Committee, wrote in a let¬ter to housing officials, “With suchoverwhelming support, we stronglyrecommend that this change go into ef¬fect as soon as possible.” The Econom¬ics Committee seeks ways to save stu¬dent housing residents money.IHC-Housing Office negotiations areunderway.College Bowl winsThe U of C College Bowl team wonthe Regional Tournament held Feb. 17and 18 by defeating the University ofWisconsin-Madison in the final gameby a score of 405-210. Schools from Mi¬chigan, Wisconsin, and Illinois compet¬ed in the tournament.This victory entitles the team to playin the Nationals, which are tentativelyto be held at Ohio State University inlate May. The final game of the nation¬al tournament will possibly be broad¬cast live by NBC. The team will alsotravel to Atlanta, GA for the EmoryNational Invitational Tournament.College Bowl team members are Mi¬chael Day, first-year business studentand co-captain with Richard Cordray,first-year law student; Urban Larson,Jeff Trapp, and Jonathan Fellows, allstudents in the College.PSRChicago Physicians for Social Responsibilityand the CACDThe U of C’s Committee on Arms Control andDisarmamentpresentCIVIL DEFENCE IN THENUCLEAR AGEA talk by Dr. Jennifer LeaningMount Auburn Hospital—Cambridge, Mass.(Pritzker School of Medicine Class of1975)Co-Editor of The Counterfeit ArkTuesday, February 214:30 p.m.Dora De Li AuditoriumChicago Lying-In HospitalFor more information rail the Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament, 241-5751or Physicians for Social Responsibility, 663-1777The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984 —7uMH MM Ml ■ MIN Hi NmmKm11* N£wsf;tiiiil®fDOC: a 52-year-old tradition going strongcontinued from page oneThe DOC series run on weekdays;Friday and Saturday nights are givenover to more recent big budgetHollywood films. “There are twomajor reasons for the big weekendmovies,” Treasurer David Wolinskysaid. “People don’t have to go last year. The PG crowds surprisedus, but now' the shows are moreorderly, quieter, and we’re policingthem better.”“But we can’t turn away labstudents,” he said. “This is acommunity service we’re providing,PHOTO BY KC MORRISMike Kotze and Ben Wolf of DOC Filmsdowntown to see them, and we makeup for the weekday losses.” This is aformat the other film groups share;weekend moneymakers subsidize thelesser known weekday shows. “Somepeople complain about our weekendshows, that there are too many labschool students, that there are‘rowdy’ elements which disrupt theshows,” Makos said, “but that was high-quality popular movies athalf-price, and they help us show thefilms we’re known for the rest of theweek.”Even the weekend films don’talways make money. “People don’trealize how expensive it is to rent,say, Flashdance,” Kotze said. “Weneed a lot of people to show up just tobreak even. That (Flashdance) is aChicago Literary ReviewFINALMEETINGTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY2310:00 PM.5700 S. Blackstone #2All staff etc., pleasemake an appearance movie we show becasue it’s popular,not because it’s profitable.”This policy, though, after a tough1983, is working. “DOC Films used tobe one of the wealthiest groups oncampus,” Wolinsky noted. “But lastspring and winter quarters weredisasters. We had a very successfulsummer, though, and we’re doingwell now.” Well enough, in fact, toproduce a short film. Makos, incharge now of developing DOC’sfilm-making capabilities, is directingDorm of the Dead, a horror spoof.“DOC has always made movies,”he said. “Angelo Restivo madeEscape (in which Makos starred) afew years ago, and we should finishthis (Dorm) in the spring.”Why spoofs? “The spoof format iseasier to use — people identify whatwe’re parodying, and can laugh at it.It’s hard to make a serious short thatisn’t pretentious, or won’t be viewedas such. Dorm, for example, isSwiftian in its excess, and that issomething people around hereappreciate.”There are other visible signs ofDOC’s health. Michael Perlin, a DOC“show captain” (the personresponsible for any given evening offilm) said the DOC power structure isloosening up. “There was a timewhen the members had a big say,” hesaid, “but for the past few years it’sthe three or four people on top — thechairman and some advisors — whohave been picking all the movies.This last quarter (fall) has been astep in a more democratic direction.”Chairman Kotze verified the oldprocedure. “Suggestions are made,but occasionally I put together mostof the recent series. It is easier to doalone, with everything right in frontof you and no large group of filmobssessives arguing about films whichare often economically unrealistic.” But the meeting to select thisspring’s films was different. “We hada four-hour meeting,” Kotze said,“and it was very positive, very good— different people going into the files,checking with distributors, puttingtogether coherent packages. Manymore people got involved in theprocess and learned how hard it is tohammer out a series which isdesirable, but also practical.”Practical is not quite theatmosphere in DOC’s Cobb Halloffices, though I couldn’t rule it out.What is most striking is thecommitment to film, the obsession.“I am obsessed with film in that Isee a lot of movies and 1 know a lotabout film history and theory,” Kotzesaid, “but it’s not my overwhelmingpassion.” (He opts for opera.) This isin spite of the two or three hoursKotze daily spends in the DOC offices,and the ten or so movies he seesweekly. Kotze has an impressiveenergy, the energy, I think, of one atthe head of the 160 odd enthusiasticmembers who make up DOC. In theDOC offices, something is alwaysgoing on.“The facilities are constantly inuse,” Makos noted. “There are peoplein the office talking about film, or inthe screening rooms, or up in thearchives. Sure we’re obsessed,” headmits, “but for film nuts, it’s thehealthiest atmosphere possible.”The archives, the University filmlibrary, headed by Gerald Mast, hasan extensive collection of importantand hard-to-find movies, fromCasablanca to rare Hitchcock prints.And Makos, a man for whom theword intense seems custom built, It’sa beautiful thing, I think: peopletalking about what they love. It’s notsomething that happens often on thiscampus.lillllli . |, LETTERS HU—IToub ‘at odds with art’To the editor:Mr. David Blair Toub, in a recenttirade published in the Maroon (Feb.10) has written: “Even the Music De¬partment is conservative and close-minded, an obscenity that one wouldthink would be at odds with the notionof art.” In truth Mr. Toub seems totallyoblivious of either the attitude of theMusic Department or of any “notion ofart”.Great art is not concerned with eitherconservative or liberal attitudes. Oneexample will suffice: the composer Jo¬hannes Brahms was considered, in histime, to be a conservative and a classi¬cist, while his contemporary RichardWagner was deemed a radical, yet bothwere creators of music of great andlasting value. Mr. Toub’s failure to un¬derstand that “newness” is neither anecessary nor a sufficient condition foraesthetic value demonstrates total ig¬norance on his part of the “notion ofart ”Closer to ’84To the editor:A recent correspondent reported thatthe Chicago Police will not release in¬formation to The Maroon because it isnot a “recognized newspaper” (CathyBump, 17 February 1984).When we permit the police to abridgethe First Amendment and select our so¬ciety’s sources of information we havetaken one step closer to 1984.Paul A. CarnahanStudent, Graduate Library School Concerning the Music Department,Mr. Toub is equally mistaken. The De¬partment regularly presents worksfrom each of the last nine centuries andhas two performing groups dedicatedto the music of this century. An exami¬nation of the programs of these groupsreveals a highly diverse repertory.This year the New Music Ensemble haspresented a minimalist work by TerryRiley, a chance composition by IannisXenakis, a serial work by Elliot Carter,and a neo-romantic piece by GeorgeCrumb, along with freely atonal workby Edgard Varese and eclectic piecesby Charles Ives and Dmitri Shostako¬vich. In addition the Ensemble pro¬vides a forum for the presentation ofworks by composition students at theUniversity. The ContemporaryChamber Players have equally diverseprogramming; among the composersrepresented this year have been BelaBartok, Philip Glass, Hans WernerHenze, and Ralph Shapey. I submitthat no close-mindedness can be de¬monstrated here.Sadly, Mr. Toub is unable to bear thefact that the majority of the works weperform are evidently not to his taste.The real obscenity is that he wouldhave us all conform to his apparentlyexclusive interest in Minimalism, andexclusivity that is truly “at odds withthe notion of art”.Christopher Coleman,Assistant Director,New Music EnsembleCOMING SOONTO HUTCH COMMONS...MORRY’SPIZZA & PASTA8—The Chicago >Iaroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984NEWS IN BRIEFCuba after 25 yearsThe Center for the Latin AmericanStudies is hosting a day-long confer¬ence entitled “Cuba After 25 Years”Feb. 24 at International House. Thesubject will be Cuban-US relations inthe 25 years since Castro came topower.The morning session, which begins at10 a.m., will feature Wayne Smith ofthe State Department, former head ofthe US Interest Section in Cuba duringthe Carter administration.At 1:15, Richard Pena of the Art In¬stitute of Chicago will give an illustrat¬ed talk, “The Revolution in Cuban Cin¬ema.” Ramon Sanchez Parodi, thepresent head of the Cuban Interest Sec¬tion in Washington, will speak onCuban policy toward the US at 2 p.m.Max Azicri’s views on future rela¬tions between the two countries will bethe basis of the final discussion of theday. Azicri is a political science profes¬sor at Edinboro University of Pennsyl¬vania. John Coatsworth, U of C special¬ist on Latin America, and Pastora SanJuan Cafferty, professor in SSA, willalso participate in this program.For more information, call theCenter for Latin American Studies at962-8420.Political economy talkPierre Allan, of the Centre de Re-cherches Empiriques en Relations In¬ternationales, will speak today on“Global Modeling of Political-Econom¬ic Interactions” at 4 p.m. in WilderHouse, 5811 S. Kenwood.The talk is the second of a seriessponsored by the Program on Interde¬pendent Political Economy. The pro¬gram was created last year to fostergraduate and faculty research on inter¬national political economy. For moreinformation call 753-2222.On teenage pregnancyFree pamphlets dealing with teenagepregnancy are available from theMarch of Dimes for no charge. “FactsYou Should Know About Teenage Preg¬nancy” addresses the health risks in¬volved in a teenage pregnancy. “YouAre Pregnant, You’re in Your Teens,and You Need Help” gives advice oncommunity resources and health careinformation.Both publications may be obtainedby calling 341-1370. enable cinema to ue so popular in dis¬tinctly different sections of society.The emergence of individual direc¬torial styles, commitments, and rheto¬ric will be studied contextually.The class will meet Tuesdays from1:30 to 3:30 for discussion, and Thurs¬day evenings for film-viewing ses¬sions.The faculty for the course are K.Bahl and A. Sarkar. For information,inquire at Foster 208, 962-8373.Heart Ass’n benefitMurphy in the Morning will be roast¬ed by Dr. Dave Eiser, Deborah Nor-ville, and other Chicago celebritiesMarch 1 at 6 p.m. in the Mariott’sGrand Ballroom.Sponsored by the Sales and Market¬ing Executives of Chicago, all proceedswill benefit SME’s Career EducationProgram and the research, education,and community programs of the Chica¬go Heart Association.Tickets for the reception, dinner, andentertainment cost $45. To make reser¬vations, call 356-4675 before Feb. 24.Second City NightThe Order of the C and the U of CClub of Metropolitan Chicago are spon¬soring the fifth annual Second CityTheatre Night March 4 at 7 p.m. Cost is$18 for UC club members and $20 fornon-members. For reservations, call962-7684.Voter registrationIt’s not too late to personally partici¬pate in Chicago’s own brand of politics.Precinct Registration Day is Feb. 21,the last day to register before the pri¬mary.The law has changed, and two piecesof identification are now required, in¬cluding one with your current address.Almost anything will do, such as yourlatest phone bill.For more information, call theLeague of Women Voters of Chicago at236-0315.Leaning to lectureJennifer Leaning will speak Tuesdayat 4:30 p.m. on “Civil Defense in TheNuclear Age.”Leaning graduated with honor fromthe Pritzker School of Medicine in 1975,and before that was a magna cumlaude graduate of Radcliffe College.She received a master of science in de¬mography and human ecology from^ w m mug! auu Human ctuiugvFree cancer screening Harvard School of Public HealthA free colon cancer screening isbeing offered every Monday in Febru¬ary by Hyde Park Community Hospi¬tal’s PromptCare Center. 5800 Stony Is¬land Ave.Participants in the screening will berequested to maintain a high fiber dietfor five days before completing a take-home hemocult card which must be re¬turned to the Center for testing.Symptoms that a colon tumor may bepresent include constipation, gas pains,and rectal bleeding.A high fiber diet including fresh fruit,vegetables, cereals, whole grain, andfish, helps clean the digestive tract andremoves cancer-causing poisons beforethey act.For more information on the screen¬ing, call 643-9200, ext. 330.The PromptCare Center is open 24hours daily and offers immediate medi¬cal attention, a physician referral ser¬vice, community education programs,and free Monday health screenings.New SALC courseA new course called “New Lamps orOld: The Indian Cinema Ancient andModern” is being offered this spring bythe Department of South Asian Lan¬guages and Civilizations.This course will investigate the habitof movie-going and the craft of movie¬making in India, and will study the ex¬plicit and implicit understandings thatDGoBLE-kflvT For the last six years, Leaning hasworked at Mount Auburn Hospital. Sheis co-editor of a book The CounterfeitArk. Leaning’s speech will be held inDora DeLi Auditorium in ChicagoLying-In Hospital.Annual GALA danceThe Gay and Lesbian Alliance willhold its winter quarter dance from 9p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday in Internation¬al House, 1414 E. 59th St. Requested do¬nation is $3 with UCID, $4 for others.Refreshments provided. For further in¬formation call GALA at 962-9734.Poetry Series startsThe first reading in the Hyde ParkPoetry Series will take place at 57thStreet Books, Thursday at 8 p.m., onthe corner of 57th and Kimbark.Co-sponsored by the Seminary Co-opBookstore, Pocket Poetics, and theChicago Literary Review, this week’sreading will feature W.R. Johnson,Professor of Classics at the University,Mike Donaghy, poetry editor of theChicago Review, and Karen Peterson,poet and editor of Primavera.Admission is free and free coffee willbe available. All are welcome to sup-por the inauguration of this new serieswhich will continue every two-weeksnext quarter.U)CLL KiftvO-thktooue. DfcseoS&.rr'sTifAC TO PlAV10 <T* KlLTDKiAMD roLvroy.L&.LvME'f YOU ASKEDFOR IT!MORRY’SGOTIT!ISlThai DinnersMONDAY THRU SATURDAY, 4:30 TO 8:30 P.M.AS PART OF OUR DINNER SPECIALS— ALL YOUR FAVORITES —SATAYLADNARSTIR-FRIEDPORK SPICY PORK ON SKEWERSERVED WITH CHILI-COCONUTSAUCE, CUCUMBER SALAD, ASPRING ROLL & FRIED RICESLICED BEEF WITH BROCCOLI ANDNOODLES IN OYSTER SAUCE,SERVED WITH WHITE RICESLICED PORK WITH PINEAPPLEAND CUCUMBER IN SWEET & SOURSAUCE; WHITE RICE & FRIED RICEEACHONLY $984 WITHFREEHOT TEAAND DON9T FORGET OUR...CHARBROILED STEAK $284Complete dinner with salad, roll, french fries, donutsMarinated, charbroiled $284BEEF KEBOB steak & vegetablesComplete dinner with salad, roll, french fries, donutsFRESH BROOK TROUT $084We charbroil the whole fish (deboned, “of course) with butter and seasonings. Great!Complete dinner with salad, roll, french fries, donuts$284CHARBROILED CHICKENOne-half jumbo chicken wonderfully charbroiledserved with salad, roll, french fries and donutsVEAL PARMESAN S616 $284i AC* A/*LI A MEAT OR VEGETABLELAbAbNA Complete dinner $284MAKE MORRY’S YOUR PLACEFOR DINNER... EVERY NIGHT!OUR $2.84 SPECIALS ARETHE BEST BUY IN TOWN!“YOUR DORM DINNER ALTERNATIVE!”MORRY’S DELIIN HUTCHINSON COMMONS1131 E. 57th StreetThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984 —9Toub rebuffed: fascism is a two-way streetTo the editor:It never ceases to amaze me how theso-called “liberals” on this campus —and elsewhere — claim to be the au¬thorities on what constitutes “fascism”and “racism.” Mr. Toub’s recent letterto the editor smacks of self-righteous¬ness and even bitterness toward the es¬tablishment of a new newspaper oncampus. If the Spectator is truly fascistand run by right-wing lunatics then Iwould suppose that its readership willnever amount to more than a very in¬significant number of “stormtroopers,’’and therefore will fail as apublication. Although it is still too earlyto tell if the number of latent, futureGestapo recruits on this campus can beawakened to the call of duty, Mr. Toubin any event wants to be sure to “nip inthe bud” this totally insidious move¬ment that threatens our “semi-free”country.I take issue with this “expert” onseveral innuendos and points that hepropogates. The first of these concernsthe charge that publications such as theSpectator — and by implication, theReagan Administration — are almost,if not blatantly racist in policy. It wouldseem to me that if such publicationsand the Reagan Administration were“smart racists,” they they would be to¬tally in favor of subsidized abortions inblack ghetto and Hispanic areas, whichin effect would curb the size of the fu¬ture black and Hispanic electorate.What American racist wants to see aswelling black and Hispanic electoratethat will assuredly carry increasingelectoral weight in future generations?Maybe Reagan and these conserva¬tives are “dumb racists”! It is interest¬ing to note that Hitler outlawed abor¬tion because he wanted to preserve the“race”; however if Hitler was runninga country that was 12 percent black, 6percent Hispanic, and ‘X” percentwhatever, would he have outlawedabortion or would he have encouragedit for minorities? Second, I wonder if Mr. Toub knowsthe definition of fascism. If we define itfor the moment as a “mass move¬ment” centered around the myths ofrace, youth, and supercharged violenceand intimidation, coupled with an insti¬tutionalized government/corporatesyndicalism bent on world dominationwith the Aryans at the helm, I wonder ifMr. Toub would agree with this basic,albeit brief, definition? If he doesagree, could he honestly say that publi¬cations advocating de-centralization(which is not a fascist hallmark), taxcuts (which are surely anti “bigbrother” in outlook), anti-abortion(just outlined), giving God a little morecredit (not one of Hitler’s finer vir¬tues), urban enterprize zones (theTo the editor:Over the last few years, I have beenbutton-holed by the likes of Jim Jones,Jerry Falwell, Ayatollah Khomeini,Omar Khadafy, and Ronald Reagan. Ihave had attributed to me any numberof ludicrous doctrines and theophantas-mical absurdities, from GOD IS AWOMAN (sometimes I dress up, OK,but it’s no big deal) to the projectedelection of a Democratic president in1984. Until now, I have kept my peace,content that I will have the last wordwith all these clowns in my own goodtime, and happy that their bombast isat least the source of some occasionalamusement. But now, some snot-nosedfreshman from Los Angeles, with aname that even I can’t pronouce, hasmanaged to further besot my reputa¬tion with such egomanical tom-follery,that infinite patience is no longer an op¬tion. I can take a “Crusade of Ameri¬ca.” But the LA Raiders?! Time to dustoff the Inquisition!Let’s start with some real facts,Jack. When I decided to wrap up cre¬ation by planting a perfect garden. Nazis stressed the corrupt nature ofurban living), and support of Israel(need more be said ) — are fascist? Butwe already know the answer, don’t we?No, Reagan is a fascist because of“strong defense” is a “war machine,”family and hard work are “Nazi val¬ues,” anyone stridently anti-commu¬nist must be fascist, the battle againstcrime and the mob is really a public re¬lations gimmick because Reaganknows Sinatra and Sinatra is the mob,and finally that Reagan is the Master ofDouble-speak. But I wonder who reallyis doing the double-speaking here?Finally, I am glad to see that Mr.Toub still considers this a “semi-free”country. If the “free-market”and “freepress” make us a “semi-free”, Iwhere did I put it? “Eastward, InEden,” that’s where. When I madeththe sun to rise in the morning, wheredid I stick it? In the East. At best, theWest gets sloppy seconds. That the citi¬zens of the East Coast of America mustget up early each morning to tend to thegovernment and economy of their na¬tion, while something called Lee Mar¬vin rollerskates in Hollywood, shouldcome as no surprise to anyone familiarwith human history. The East hasalways pulled the West’s weight, eversince those losers Adam and Evepacked up a few bear skins and headedfor Malibu.Which brings me to the subject of thisyear’s Superbowl. Typical of all bud¬ding demogogues, our friend in the Col¬lege has concocted an interpretation ofmy on-going creation which is unin¬formed by even the rudiments of asense of humor. Truth be known, a fewbillion years ago I started to messaround with a new toy that I liked tocall evolution. That is, most of the timeit’s evolution. But its a tricky bugger,even for me, and sometimes things get wonder how Mr. Toub would propose tomake us “totally” free? Toub, ofcourse, has the answer once again. Hewould start by deleting the skin colorsof alleged muggers in police blottersappearing in the newspaper, thus free¬ing the citizens from the impedimentsof accurate description in the quest tonab criminals. He would also overhallthe Music Dep’t by purging the conser¬vatives and therefore make it free onceagain. Yes, indeed, Mr. Toub is an ex¬pert on fascism, but I’m not so surewhich side he is on!C.E. CopenhaverGraduate studentGeography departmenta little out of hand — like this January,for instance. All I did was leave thekeyboard for a minute to grab a cup ofcoffee, and before I knew it, a bunch ofmutations from Los Angeles with acombined IQ of 40 had succeeded in sonauseating one of my finest creations,that they were rendered incapable ofcoherent play. Damn. I’m perfect butparadoxical. And occasionally a littlesloppy.Now, I like Chicago as much as thenext guy (I made it, after all), and I’vebeen to all the museums. Solti’s fine,but it’s the pizza that keeps me comingback. But to be quite honest, I’ll geteven more excited about Chicago whenher mayor turns his attention to somereally pressing issues, such as the pas¬sage of an effective pooper-scooperlaw.As for California, check the paper inabout a week.Soli Deo Victoria,GODThrough my servant,Samuel P. WhalenGod has the last word: go EastA Hiliel LectureTHE RESPONSIBILITY OF SCIENTISTSFOR THE CONSEQUENCES OF THEIR WORK:A HALACHIC VIEWRabbi Gedaliah RabinowitzRosh Yeshiva at Hebrew Theological College, SkokieTeacher of Talmud and codesFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 • 8:30 P.M. atHILLEL HOUSE * 5715 S* WOODLAWN AVE.The University of ChicagoSymphonic Wind EnsembleHOLST:Mors ■ "The Planets"IVES:Variations on "America"Farobag Cooper, conductorSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25 • 6 P.M.MAHDEL HALL • 57th and UNIVERSITYFREE ADMISSIONFunded by SGFC —PERSONAL COMPUTERS—Sties, Education, Service,Computers, printers, modems and supplies.AUTHORIZED KAYPRO DEALERVALUE ADDED SYSTEMS1701 E. 53r§ Street §€7 4440 IMA800N -I—96235551The Closer You Get The Better We Look!Hyde Park’s Completely NewApartment ResidenceA Short Walk From The lake And:Harper Cl. • University of Chicago77te /. C. • RestaurantsIncludes• Master T. V. Antenna * Sew Ceramic Tile• Ind. Control Heat • Sew Appliances• Wall to Wall Carpeting • Sight Doormen• Central Air Conditioning! Bedroom from $405 - 2 Bedroom from $5255200 S. BIACKSTONE A VE.1 BLOCK WEST OF HARPER COURT APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 55th St.Large2 Vs,4 & 6 rm.apts.fZ/wnee/uz/eOccupancyBU8 5566YOUR ON-CAMPUSPHOTOHEADQUARTERSSales-Repair-Supplies• Rentals by day - week - month:Cameras, projectors, screens, recorders(w/valid U. of C. 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.- Battalias - Film- Darkroom accessories - Video tapes- Cassatts tapas - Chemicals- RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor! YfSA- 962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364 ImwmtMdj•10—The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, February 21, lawKADIMAReform - Progressive Judaism on CampuspresentsWHO IS A JEW?THE DEBATE ON PARTI LINEAGESaturday, February 254:00 p.m.Rabbi Allen Bregman • Serge A. LippeB'nai Brith Hillel Foundation5715 S. Woodlawn752-1127 HAPPY 21stMARCSTRECKERFROM YOUR FAMILYIN KANSASDECORATING& RESTORATIONInterior • ExteriorRICHARD NAYER288-0918•Free Estimates!•Excellent Hyde Park references MAROONSPRING BREAK *84.THE TRADITION LIVES ON!1AKE THE GREATERFORT LAUDERDALE BREAK.Hollywood, Pompano Beach, Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Deerfield Beach.Want die tradition to live on forever? Then oi dei you* full-vuloi 17" a 23" postei 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. itt,( \ 1A 1l Sale Oates: Feb. 22-25 ^CERTIFIEDSOFTMARGARINE2-8 oz. cups 69*HIGH LINEROCEANPERCH1 lb. $159TOTINO'SPIZZA10.8 02. 99*PLUMROSESLICED HAM4 oz. $109KRAFTVELVEETA12 oz. $139RICELANDRICE2 lb. 69*CONTAOINATOMATO 3/PASTE 89*COFFEERICH 2/16 oz. 79*WESSONOIL48 oz. $2«CHEESE OF THE WEEKJARLSBERGSWISS $2"RAGUSPAGHETTISAUCE SI5932 oz. ABROCCOLI 59*GREENPEPPERS ilb. 59*LEMONSlb. i 29*BANANASlb. i 29*FRENCH'SIDAHO SPUDSMASHED POTATOES27 oz. $129PUFFFACIALTISSUE 69*1 FINER FOODS1 | SERVINGI f S3r<j PRAIRIE SHORESH KIMKQHt VI fl/fl IQ’’ Ut Dknkjf Wnefe S’t 4 V'rtntf 6.' On»eThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984—11Saint Norbert basketball wins them bothEdge women for title, 78-66 Nationally ranked menBy Geoff SherryAny possibility of a conferencechampionship disappeared last Fridaynight as the University of Chicagowomen’s basketball team fell to St.Norbert 78-66. The Maroons were unde¬feated in the conference going into thegame, while the Green Knights had lostonly to the Maroons.Chicago defeated St. Norbert 68-67earlier in the season; however, St. Nor-bert’s larger margin of victory willgive them the nod to play in the confer¬ence title game.The Maroons jumped out to a 17-11lead at the 12-minute mark of the firsthalf when St. Norbert called a timeout.Green Knight head coach Connie Tilleyregrouped her teams, and St. Norbertgradually closed the gap to 29-28 with4:11 remaining in the half. TheKnight’s Amy Spielbauer hit a baselinejumper to give St. Norbert the lead forgood. The Green Knights widened themargin to 39-31 at the intermission.St. Norbert opened the second periodwith eight straight points and neverlooked back. The Green Knights capi¬talized on their height advantage byconstantly pushing the ball into 5-10Amy Proctor, who was being guardedby 5-5 Beverly Davis. Maroon pointguard Dana Howd pointed out, “Wehave the number one defense in theconference but we did not play like thattonight. St. Norbert saw their chance(Proctor) and took advantage of it inthe second half.’’The Maroons never quit. They reeledoff seven straight points and closed thegap to 49-40 with outstanding rebound¬ing and shooting. “We were not re¬ bounding well earlier in the game.Coach (Kevin) McCarthy told us thatone of us would shoot and the restwould take pictures,” commentedHowd.Chicago played even with theKnights the rest of the game but couldnot overtake them. St. Norbert wasshooting and passing well. “Shootingand offense is their game; we cannotexpect to do well if they score 78points,” added Howd. The Maroonsscored one more field goal than St.Norbert; however the Green Knightsconverted 18 free throws to Chicago’s 4for 11.The differences between this loss andChicago’s earlier win were many: how¬ever one obvious plus for the GreenKnights was the presence of Spielbauerthroughout the game. She fouled outwith seven minutes left in the earliercontest. St. Norbert head coach ConnieTilley commented, “Amy is a leader onthe floor. It hurt us last game when shefouled out. Our freshmen were notready to fill her shoes at the time.”Proctor paced the Green Knightswith 27 points while Gretchen Gatesscored 24 for the Maroons. KarenWalsh had five assists while clipping 10points with Wendy Pietrzak added 9points for the Maroons.The Maroons (14-6, 11-1— reboundedfrom Friday’s disappointing loss with a59-42 win over Lawrence UniversitySaturday. Gretchen Gates led allscorers with 29 points while also grab¬bing 13 rebounds.Chicago travels to Beloit Feb. 22 forthe final game of the season.PHOTO BY KC MORRISWrestling finals at Midwest Conference ChampionshipMaroons 3rd in championship meetShin, Lietzan to nationals SaturdayBy Frank LubyThe University of Chicago wrestlingteam placed third in the Midwest Con¬ference Wrestling Championships,held at the Henry Crown Field Houseon Saturday. Chicago’s total of 531/}points trailed Coe, which tallied 5734.Cornell College, nationally ranked andfavored to win the meet, placed fivechampions en route to 111 points andthe title.“We did fine considering we only en¬tered 8 wrestlers in the 10 weightclasses,” said Maroon head coach LeoKocher. The Maroons had two champi¬ons. Gene Shin won the 190 lb. weightclass, and Karl Lietzan took an excit¬ing overtime victory to win the 157 lb.class.Lietzan reached the finals againstCornell’s Rick Miller, whom he defeat¬ed in last year’s title bout in overtimeas well. Tied 4-4 at the end of regula¬tion, Lietzan won the “very emotional”match with a 6-2 margin in the extraperiod.Shin and Lietzan qualify for the Divi¬sion III Nationals at the SUNY-Binghamton, this Saturday“Both have chances of placing,” saidKocher. A placement at nationals qua¬ lifies the wrestler for All-Americanstatus.In the other weight classes, Chicagotook one second place and three thirdplaces. Mike Perz took second in the142 lb. class, and Jeff Farwell finishedthird in the 134 lb. class. Also takingthird places were Mark Nootens (150lb.) and Quentin Paquette (177 lb.) Pa¬quette was not seeded in the top four inhis weight class, and did an “excellentjob,” said Kocher.Coe, Monmouth, and Illinois Collegeeach had one champion apiece. Cornellstrolled to victory, placing all ten wres¬tlers, including eight finalists and fivechampions.Lietzan, who might have missed themeet had not his shoulder healed,earned the Outstanding Wrestler of theMeet award, as voted by the coaches.“It (the injury) came around,” saidKocher, “and he looked about 100 per¬cent.”Kocher would also like to express hisappreciation of seniors Nootens andTim Bachenburg, who missed the meetwith a broken hand. Each has wrestled“and has been dedicated” for the lastfour years, and had a “super lastyear,” according to Kocher.12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984 beat “slack” MaroonsBy Frank LubyBreaking open the game with somehot shooting and quick passing in theopening minutes, the St. Norbert men’svarsity basketball team — ranked 12thin the nation prior to the contest —rolled over Chicago, 89-54, Friday nightat the St. Norbert Field House.Norbert virtually clinched the con¬ference with that win and a subsequenttriumph over Lake Forest Saturday,while Chicago dropped from title con¬tention. The Maroons, however, re¬bounded with a 67-57 victory overLawrence on Saturday.“We didn’t really come ready toplay,” said Maroon each coach JohnAngelus, who added that his teamshowed “no intensity.”The Green Knights showed theirdominance by scoring on seven of eightpossessions as the first half developed,finally opening a 20-8 lead on a basketby All-American candidate Joe Em¬merich, who finished the evening with10 points and a handful of assists.Chicago’s major offensive thrustcame from freshman Dave Witt. Wittled all scorers with 16 points on the eve¬ning, and in the first half worked hardto get open underneath to score anddraw fouls. The Green Knights cooledoff after their early run, losing Em¬merich to foul trouble, and losing theirtouch from the outside. The Maroonsplayed them evenly for a five minutestretch until the Knights reached thebonus, when they caught fire again.Overall St. Norbert hit 10 free throws in12 tries in the first half, and held a 42-26halftime advantage.Chicago hurt itself with some badpassing, and eventually tried to forcethe ball against the deceptively quickNorbert defense. That control enabledthe Green Knights to control the game at both ends of the floor, and dictate thetempo, as they did when Andy Ariansand Mike Hietpas teamed up with Em¬merich for three consecutive fastbreak baskets midway through thefirst half.“We played bad, they played well,”said Angelus, who once again said theMaroons had a “slack day.” GuardRob Omiecinski had just two fieldgoals, and scoring leader Keith Liberthad one. Nick Meriggioli finished thegame with no points.Chicago’s last gasp came early in thesecond half, when baskets by Witt onfeeds from Meriggioli and Tom Red-burg put some spark in the Maroon of¬fense and cut the lead to 44-30 with18:42 left in the game. Six straightpoints by the Knights opened an even¬tual 24-8 string, however, and set thestage for several minutes of garbagetime. A 10-footer by John Maccoux, abasket by guard Mark Weninger, and afast break hoop by Emmerich quick¬ened the pace, and the Maroons couldnot keep up as Norbert reeled off bas¬ket after basket.A basket by Hietpas capped the rallyand hiked the lead to 30 points, 68-38,with 11:43 remaining in the contest.Maccoux led the Green Knights with14, while Hietpas had 12 and Emmerich10. Libert posted 10 for Chicago, eightof them on free throws.Chicago came back the next day on astrong game from Libert to beatLawrence University, in Appleton.“I was glad to see that it didn’t carryover into Saturday,” said Angelus. TheMaroons controlled the game, andshowed much more aggressivenessthan the night before in Green Bay.The Maroons close their season to¬morrow night against St. Norbert atthe Henry Crown Field House.Wabash pounds MaroonsBy Shong ChowShowing versatility and depth, thelikes of which the UC men’s tracksquad had not seen previously this sea¬son, Wabash College crushed the UCteam 101-29, as well as defeatingsquads from Wheaton and ElmhurstCollege in dual meet action in the FieldHouse Thursday night. Wabash “justran away from everybody,” said UCtrack coach Ted Haydon after themeet.Wabash College, a small all-maleschool in Indiana, showed the strengthof its team from the outset, scoringearly victories in the shotput and the60-yd dash. With the initial lead and theenthusiasm evident from among theteam members and a small contingentof followers, it was evident that the vis¬itors from Indiana had come to win.“We’re running well, though we aren’tin really good shape because wehaven’t had enough practice time withfacilities like here (Field House),” saidWabash head track coach Rob Johnsonduring the meet. “Our team has a lot ofenthusiasm and the effort, which I feelis most important, and is going realwell,” he added.Despite the Wabash showing, the UCsquad smothered Elmhurst 93-37 andnarrowly escaped past Wheaton 69-61in the dual meet scoring of the meet.Elmhurst, which only brought a par¬tial squad, could not compete effective¬ly against the larger and more bal¬anced UC team. Wheaton College, onthe other hand, matched the UC teampoint for point throughout the meet, theissue finally being decided in the finalevent of the meet, the 1600 (4 X 400)relay. In the event the UC relay teamof John Seykora, Reggie Milles, GuyYasko, and Alan Burdick handily de¬feated the relay team to rapture thewin for the UC team. Other good performances on thenight for the UC team were turned byAaron Rourke, long and triple jumpersJeff Kaiser and Lap Chan, and Yaskoagain in the 800-m run. Rourke,through a mix-up in the running of theevents, missed his usual entry in themile and decided to run in the 1000-ydevent. Opening a substantial leadearly, Rourke, with a grueling pace,outdistanced the rest of the field to wineasily. Yasko, in contrast, won the800-m run in heart arresting fashion.Trailing Wabash’s Mike Hollandthrough the first three laps by as much30 yards, Yasko closed the gap with aflash of speed to pull even with Hollandon the final turn. Racing stride forstride down the straightaway, neitherYasko or Holland could gain the advan¬tage. With five yards to go and theField House rocking with shouts of en¬couragement, Yasko tucked in his neckand bore down as hard as could to beatHolland — winning by the length of hisneck at best.The best individual efforts of thenight, undoubtedly though, belonged tothe long and triple jumping duo of JeffKaiser and Lap Chan. Chan, a fresh¬man, managed to beat his previousbest in the long jump by about a footwhile Kaiser had personal bests in boththe long and triple jump by about thesame margin of a foot. “I’m peakingjust like I want to,” said Kaiser, “andhopefully I will peak for the conferencemeet, 1 teei l nave a good chance toplace.” When asked whether he hadtaken his vitamins that morning,Kaiser said, “I don’t know but some¬thing is going right.”The UC team’s next meet is tonightat 6 p.m. in the Field House in a com¬bined meet with the women, againstthe University of Wisconsin (Whitewater).SPORTS tvMen’s and Women’s swim teams win in WisconsinKinney posts national timesBy Edward AchuckThe men’s and women’s swimmingteams concluded their final dual meetof the season against Beloit and RiponCollege, at Ripon, with a surprising,yet fulfilling afternoon. The menromped Ripon 85-24 and beat Beloit57-48, while the women defeated Beloitby a score of 49-46.Unexpected times and close finishesby swimmers in both the men’s andwomen’s teams created a sense of ex-citment throughout the meet. In the400-yard medley relay, Les Brownswam the backstroke leg of the event,excited fellow teammates by drivingthe Chicago “B” team, affectionatelycalled the “Scrub Relay”, to pace theChicago “A” team to a first place fin¬ish. For the women’s team, Lisa Pau-lius took an unexpected third place inthe 100-yard backstroke to set the stagefo the climax of the meet: Martha Kin¬ney qualified for Nationals in the 50-yard freestyle by blazing to a firstplace finish in a time of 25.2 seconds.Coach Pell feels that Kinney also hasa good chance for Nationals in the 100-yard butterfly and the 100-yard frees¬tyle which “may lead to her anotherAll-American rating this year.”The 400-yard medley relay team ofRick Kloos, Craig Parker, JonathanEvans, and Duane Caneva ignited themen’s victories with a first place finishin the event. Senior captain JohnHotchkiss finished a close second in the200-yard freestyle, but made up for hisloss by winning the 500-yard freestylelater in the meet. Everett Lee andKloos dominated the 200-yard individu¬al medley by sweeping the event withfirst and second place finishes respec¬tively. Similarly, Doug Cipriano andEvans swept the 200-yard butterflyalso with first and second place fin¬ishes respectively. Brown, in his first backstroke event of the season, raceuto a second place finish behind team¬mate Kloos who took first. Mike Rud-dat placed second in both the 50- and100-yard freestyle, and diver DuaneCaneva placed first in the 1-meter div¬ing.The 200-yard medley relay team ofTina Ellerbee, Katie Moran, Kinney,and Lesley Ham took first place tostart the meet for the women. Seniorcaptain Kinney placed first in twoevents and led teammates to secondplace finishes: in the 50-yard freestyle,By Frank LubyThe University of Chicago men’svarsity basketball team ends it seasontomorrow evening at the Henry CrownField House against the St. NorbertGreen Knights at 7:30 p.m. The teamwill sponsor a free throw shooting con¬test for all children aged 8-12 years athalftime of that game, and the winnerswill earn T-Shirts.“This is our championship game,”said Maron head coach John Angelus.“We got their attention; now we haveto get their respect.”St. Norbert, nationally ranked andapparently assured of the conferencetitle, pounded the Maroons in GreenBay on Friday, but Angelus remarked“we didn’t come ready to play.“We can beat them,” he added. “Wecouldn’t ask for a better game to endour season with.”Friday marked Chicago’s first gameever against St. Norbert in Green Bay,and the Green Knights played a Mid¬west Conference schedule for the firsttime this season after leaving anotherleague in Wisconsin. Kinney led Ham to a 1-2 sweep, then ledEllerbee to a 1-2 finish in the 100-yardbutterfly. Ellerbee, a strong finisher inher events, once again brought swim¬mers and spectators to their feet in aclose come-from-behind first place fin¬ish in the 200-yard individual medleyby edging out her opponent in the lastyards of the event. Ham, in an explo¬sive race, quickly outdistanced thefield to place first in the 100-yard frees¬tyle.Second place finishers for the womenwere: Diane Tarkowski in the 1000-Norbert has considerable strength inall facets of the game, including depth.“They had nine players come in andplay well,” said Angelus.Stopping St. Norbert involves takingcontrol of the tempo of the game, forthe Green Knights slowed down andquickened Friday’s game almost atwill. Taking advantage of Norbert’stendency to overplay, the Maroons canwork the ball inside to draw fouls andforce the Norbert defense to back off.This strategy worked several timesFriday, but Norbert would always neu¬tralize the momentum with a steal or aseries of nice fast break passes.“We have to come out and scoresome points early,” said Angelus. Thelast time Chicago jumped to a corn- yard freestyle; Lauren Fisher in the200-yard freestyle; and Moran in boththe 500-yard freestyle and 100-yardbreaststroke.“It is good to end the season with awin,” says Pell, and “times are begin¬ning to drop for the upcoming Confer¬ence meets.”The women’s swimming team will becompeting in the Midwest ConferenceChampionships this Friday and Satur¬day. The men’s swimming team willcompete in the Conference Champion¬ships the following week.manding early lead they upset ueiou,the only conference team to defeat theGreen Knights this season.Joe Emmerich, the Green Knights’prized forward, played little role inFriday’s victory, and that just demon¬strates how deep Norbert is.“It will take a great effort to beatthem. We have a lot to prove. If we’regoing to be contenders next year,” saidAngelus, “we can prove it right here.We have a lot to gain.”Basketball broadcastMen’s basketball returns to WHPK88.3 FM tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m.when the Maroons host St. Norbert.Join Craig Rosenbaum for the play-by-play, and tune in it 7:15 for the pre¬game show.Sports CalendarMen’s Basketball — Wednesday, Feb. 22, vs. St. Norbert College, at HCFH,7:30 p.m. This game ends the 1983-84 season for the Maroons.Women’s Basketball — Wednesday, Feb. 22, at Beloit College, 7 p.m. This isthe women’s final game as well.Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track — Tuesday, Feb. 21, vs. University of W is-consin (Whitewater), at HCFH, 6 p.m.Maroons basketball faces Norbert tonightA vacancy on theMAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARDmust be filledOne position, for the remainder ofthe 1983-84 school year, isnow open.Applications are available in theStudent Activities Office, Ida NoyesHall, Room 210.Deadline for applications is:MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27 at 5 p.m.A selection committee will choose one applicant Apartment Shopping?Choice Hyde Park Locations!5136 S. Harper——5134 S. Harper—2 bedroom, 2 bath,fireplace, heat and hotwater, stove andrefrigerator, furnished.$575.00 month, adultsonly, no pets.—55th & Everett4 room, 1 bedroom, livingroom, dining room andkitchen, heat, hot water,stove and refrigerator,furnished.$410.00 month, adultsonly, small pet ok. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, stove,refrigerator, heat and hotwater furnished.$400.00 month, adultsonly, no pets.— 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, liv¬ing room, dining room,kitchen and dinette,heat, hot water, stoveand refrigerator, furnish¬ed.$360.00 month, adultsonly, small pets ok.—5100 Comelt—Studio apts $290.00month1 bedroom apts $370.00monthStove, refrigerator, heat,hot water, cooking gasand electric included. 5120 S. Harper-2.5 room3.5 room$275.00 month$360.00 monthStove, refrigerator,heat and hotwater, furnished..The Sack Realty Company, Inc1459 east hyde park boulevardChicago, Illinois 60615 • 684-8900The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday. February 21, iy»4—13CAMPUS FILMSWhile the City Sleeps (Fritz Lang,1956) The immortal Dana Andrews(Laura), the incomparable Ida Lupino(High Sierra), and the ineffable Vin¬cent Price (Michael Jackon’s Thriller)star in this tale of newspaper reportersand policemen on the trail of a berserkkiller. Lang’s vision of modern societyas a netherworld of crime and para¬noia invests this cops-and-robbers talewith an ambiguity which is at the heartof Lang’s greatest films. Filmed in Cin¬emascope and worth the trouble, Whilethe City Sleeps was made the year Iwas born, which may explain some¬thing. Tues., Feb. 21 at 8 p.m. DOC. $2.-JMJulius Caesar (Joseph Mankiewicz,1953) When Louis Calheron gets too bigfor his britches, it takes James Mason,John Gielgud, and Edmond O’Brien tocut him down to size. But wait, isn’tthat Marlon Brando standing off to oneside, waiting to pick up the pieces? Youbet it is, bard-noids! It’s Rome when itsizzles, friends, Romans, and country¬men, so watch out! Look for GreerGarson and Deborah Kerr, in roles thattechnically should be played by boys!Zounds! Wed., Feb. 22 at 8 p.m. DOC.$2. —MKDouble Wedding (Richard Thorpe,1937) Richard Thorpe was MGM’s an¬swer to William Keighley — a veritableHollywood work-horse, churning outalmost 200 films from 1923 to 1967,equally comfortable with blockbusterbudgets and shoestrings. And thoughhe is best remembered for B-westernsand thrillers, sheer prolificacy ensuredthat some of his output would be come¬dy. Here, of course, the main attrac¬tions are William Powell and MyrnaLoy (the unflappable sophistisleuths inthe Thin Man series), engaged in amad-cap tug-of-war over FlorenceRice. Bohemian artist Powell wants tomarry Rice; debutante Loy thinks hersister can do better. Or does she?Whatever Powell and Loy’s motives,the film’s title is a forgone conclusion.But the pratfalls, twists, and Powell-Loy repartee are not — as refreshing adiversion for audiences as it must havebeen for Thorpe. Wed., Feb. 22 at 8:30 p.m. LSF. $2 —PFPrincess Yank Kwei Fei (Kenji Mizo-guchi, 1955) “It has the aura of a fairytale — in 18th-century China an emper¬or falls in love with a servant girl — yetthe emotions it provokes are anythingbut simple. Again, Mizoguchi focuseshis attention on the strength of womenin the face of male frailty. In a final,breathtaking camera movement, he el¬evates that strength to an eternal prin¬ciple.” — Dave Kehr, The ReaderThurs., Feb. 23 at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. In¬ternational House. $2. — BTMen In War (Anthony Mann, 1957)Mann’s only war story is not a propa¬gandists genre piece, but is a paranoiddescent into the personal hell of a footsoldier during the Korean war. Thefilm describes the retreat of a patrol(Aldo Ray, Robert Ryan, Vic Morrow)and the psychological tensions whichmount as they deal with landslides, ex¬plosions, and impassible mountainranges. “A superlative example of theMann character’s never-ending questfor freedom and space in a harsh, an¬tagonistic environment.” I said that.Thurs., Feb. 23 at 8 p.m. DOC. $2.-JMYoung and Innocent (The Girl WasYoung) (Alfred Hitchcock, 1937) Thisearly British thriller, reportedly one ofHitch’s favorites, follows closely thestory in The 39 Steps — an innocentwriter (Derrick De Marney), wantedby the police in connection with amurder he didn’t commit, is forced intohunting the real villain. The motifs areamong Hitchcock’s favorites: the gent¬le Cornish countryside — calm andpeaceful by day — becomes a treacher¬ous nightmare by night. Even seagullsbecome unpredictable, attacking thecamera without apparent provocation.Another favorite, developed more fullyin Strangers on a Train, actually hadits genesis in Young and Innocent: thetwilight between mere murderousthoughts (standing to acquire an inher¬itance from the victim) and murderousacts. As with all Hitchcock imports, beprepared for a very deterioratedsoundtrack. Thurs., Feb. 23 at 8:30p.m. LSF. $2 — PF TuesdayIsraeli Folkdancing, 8 pm, Ida NoyesHillel: Midrash Class, 8 pm.Crossroads: International Cooking Demonstra¬tion, 10 am. SI.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Turkish Cir¬cle, The State of the Arts in Turkey, 1 pm, Harper506.Career and Placement: Recruiters from AurthurAnderson and Company, Reynolds Club 201, sign¬up.Calvert House: Investigation into Catholicism 7pm.Microbiology Seminar: Cloning of a TemporallyRegulated Gene of Bacilus, Subtilis: The SubtilisnGene. 4 pm, CLSC 1117. Coffee served before theseminar in CLSC 850.DOC: While the City Sleeps, 8 pm, Cobb $2.Chicago Physicians for Social Responsibility andCommittee on Arms Control and Disarmament:Civil Defense in the Nuclear Age, Dr. JenniferLeaning, Mount Auburn Hospital, Cambridge.4:30, Dora De Li Auditorium, Chicago Lying-InBridge Club, 7 pm, Ida Noyes Library.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: The Common¬wealth of Turkish Art: Ottoman Festivals. 3 pm,Breasted Hall, The Oriental Institute.Crossroads: All levels of English, 2 pm. SocialHouc, 3:30, Beginning German. 7 pm.Career and Placement: Peace Corps, ReynoldsClub 201, sign-up.Career and Placement: Research Engineers. Re¬quires Ph.D. in biochemistry, biology, biophy¬sics.Rockefeller Chapel: Ecumenical Service of HolyCommunion followed by breakfast, 8 am. CarillonRecital and Tower Tour, 12:15 pm.Hillel: Activists for a Progressive Israel, 8 pm.Pro-Life Assoc: 7:30, Ida Noyes 3rd floor.English & Scottish Country Dance, 8 pm, Ida Badminton Club, 7:30, Ida Noyes Gym.Women’s Union Meeting, 6:30 pm. Ida NoyesHall.Biochemistry Seminar: Mechanism of Activationof E. Coli RNA Polymerases, William R. McClure,Carnegie-Mellon Univ, 4 pm, CLSC 101. Refresh¬ments served at 3:45 in CLSC 151.Career Placement: Recruiters from Morgan Guar¬anty Trust Company, Reynolds Club 201. Sign¬up.LSF: Double Wedding, 8:30 pm, Law School, $2.DOC: Julius Caesar, 8 pm, Cobb $2.I-House: Colonial American Dinner in Honor ofWashington’s Birthday, dining room 4:30-7 pm.THURSDAYLSF: Young and Innocent, 8:30 pm, Law School,$2.DOC: Men in War, 8 pm, Cobb $2.I-House Film: Princess Yang Kwei Fei, 7:30, 9:30pm, I-House. $2.German Club: STAMMTISCH, German Conver¬sation Table, 9 pm, C-ShopCenter for Far Eastern Studies: The Second Char¬acter Simplification, 3:30-5 pm, JRL 522.CAUSE, meeting, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Dept, of Romance Languages and Literaturespresents Spectacle Litteraire et Poetique, EricChartier, 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall. $3.Center for the Study of Industrial Societies: Insti¬tutionalized Dominance, Diffuse Status andGender in the Workplace, 12 noon, Wilder House.Rockefeller Chapel: Choral Vesper Service, 5:15pm. Chancel Choir Rehearsal, 5:45.German Club: Film, 1 aus ohne Huter (with subtit¬les), 4:30 pm, Quantn.ll.Music Dept: University Chamber Choir, 12:15,Goodspeed Recital Hall, Free.Hillel: Isaac Singer's Nightmare & Mrs. Pupko’sBeard and Yiddish: The Mame-Lishn, 7:30. $1.50,$2.50.Hillel: Advanced Talmud Class, 5:30.The Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago. It ispublished twice per week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon are in IdaNoyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304. Phone 962-9555.Anna HupertEditorJeffrey TaylorManaging EditorCliff GrammichNews EditorMichael ElliottNews Editor Frank LubySports EditorJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorArthur U. Ellis Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerSondra KruegerFeatures Editor KC MorrisPhotography EditorPurnima DubeyAssistant Features Editor Campbell McGrathChicago Literary Review 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, Mike Kotze, Cathy LeTourneau,Jeff Makos, Ravi Rajmane, Leah Schlesinger, Nathan Schoppa, Geoff Sherry, Koyin Shih,Ellyn Streed, Jim Thompson, Bob Travis, Michelle Ward.InternationalStudentsFREEFROM INTERNATIONALSTUDENT MAGAZINE At no time has so much been gathered together for the PracticalBenefit of the International Student. And what’s more the book ischeap compared to the text books you have to buy for one classalone, quarter after quarter, semester after semester.Now you must agree that students who have access to informationdo better and achieve their goals easier than students who do not,more especially when the student is in a foreign land.This book is the result of months of diligent research and theregular price is $15 but it is Now being offered to you at thisreduced rate until March 30th, 1984.Receive next 6-months issues FREEPLUS a 13,000 Word-Rich 695 PagePocket Dictionary FREE when you orderthis Fabulous New Book “Encyclopaediaof Opportunities for International Studentsin the United States”.WHAT’S IN IT? Everything listed here and more. Won’t you buy now and save, because I know you will want thisbook someday.Just look at the Content. And Mind you the Chapters listed hereare only Half the story.I guarantee that you will be completely satisfied with this book andthat it will bring you years of joy, or return it for a full refund of yourmoney.PLUS• Establish excellent credit in as little as45 days. Use your new credit to getloans for your education or any otherpurpose.• Over 2000 sources of financialassistance for International Students,ranging from $100 to as much as$12,000. Most awards based on needalone.• Where you can open an internationalchecking account and write checks inU.S. Dollars, British Pounds, SwissFrancs, or other currencies.• A non-profit finance company thatloans small amounts from $10 up to$100 INTEREST FREE.• About 600 bands, television shows,stage and theatre concerts, exhibits,speakers and more available free.• How to Get Thousands of New Bookseach year free.• How to Get Free Travel.• How to Get information on any subjectin the library and use it for your TermPaper, Thesis or Reports. • How to improve your social life, Freeyourself from loneliness.• Big U.S. Corporations employing In¬ternational Students for theiroverseas operations including yourhome country.• Over 200,000 Money Grants, Scholar¬ships, Fellowships and other financialassistance offered by U.N.E.S.C.O.for study in 107 countries includingUnited States.SPECIAL BONUS REPORT• How To Get FREE Groceries - Learnhow one woman saves $2,000 everyyear - an incredible 50% off hergrocery bill - with FREEGROCERIES! This little known (butperfectly legal) method is surprisinglyeasy to use when you know how.ORDER NOW!Why keep suffering? Read this book.Sells for $11.00 plus $1.00 shipping,total $12.00 to EDITOR, 1316 S.E. 4thSt., Suite 50, Minneapolis, MN 55414.Money back guarantee. • FREE - Gifts for the kids «FREEVITAMINS •FREE MagazineSubscriptions »FREE CASSETTETAPE ($11.95 value) *FREE ColorPosters *FREE Films *FREETravel Guides *FREE BOOKS - Onhundreds of fascinating subjects•FREE Road Atlas of the US“Many gifts are so heavy it takes$2.00-$3.00 postage to send them toyou. Your only cost - a postcard!' ’• FREE Correspondence CoursesThis Book Will TRANSFORMyour LIFESHIPPING ADDRESSNAMEADDRESSCITYSTATE ZIPTHIS OFFER GOOD UNTIL MARCH 30th, 1984. 5254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedlaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9 5 for appointment324-0200Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking Available |CALL jHERBERT REALTY I684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 AM.-4:30 P.M. *Monday thru FridayTheChicagoMaroonStadotf Nmpaper of theUniversity of Ciucagu14—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984CLASSIFIEDS WASPACE4 room Co-op apt, well-kept court bldg. nr.campus. Usable as 2 bedroom, $16,000.536 3881Airy Two Bedroom, Two Bath 9th Floor Condowith Lakeview for Sale. Wood Parquet Floorsin Well Maintained Building. Call Owner Days-947-4085Studio avail 5/1. Near UC Grad Stud Pref.Leave Message 241-6875. Serious inq only pis.CONDO FOR RENT. 1 bedroom. Nice, securebuilding, with modern conveniences &balcony. Laundry on same floor. Near Coop,1C, & CTA. On campus bus routes. $450. 4- elec¬tricity. Call Steve, 947-9544 evenings orweekends.5704 S. Harper 3’/2 rooms $390. Call MarkWilson 643-7804.SPACIOUS 4 rm apt on 55th & Everett availimmediately. $410/mo incl heat. Call Maureen962-1700 days 643-5642 eves.Absolutely immaculate 1 bedroom con¬dominium at 5457 Ingleside. New kitchen,beautiful oak floors, no cockroaches. $45,000.Excellently managed building with a largecash reserve and assessments only $115.00 permonth. Call Mr. or Mrs. Hatch 947 0667 or 962-6640.SPACE WANTEDRecent UC grad looking to assumelease/sublet studio or 1 bdrm apt til Aug orSept will consider taking a room in large aptCall Mike: weekdays: 962-1661 eve: 363-6986FOR SALEDodge Van for sale, Slant six (cylinder), 15-20mpg with ladder rack. Good engine, goodtransmission, good tires. $695. Bill 493-9122US Robotics Password Direct Connect Modem.150 300, 1200 hand auto-speed select. Hayescompatible. Comes W/RS232 cable. $330. Call752 5877 and leave message.Full-set (12) Spode UofC dinner plates circa1931. Perfect condition. $1000 Call weekends485-3454.US Robotics Password Direct Connect Modem.150-300, 1200 baud auto speed select. Hayescompatible. Comes W/RS232 cable. $330. Call752-5877 and leave message.TV RCA XL-100 19” Color w/remote $200 947-0726.CHAIR. Modern Reading Chair w/Ottoman &Floor Lamp. Black w/Chrome. $50. 947-0726.Piano Kimball upright beautifully carved $300sound good call 324-0055 Chu.1977 Toyota Corolla, 4 door, automatic, am/fmclean body, new starter, battery, recently tun¬ed. Secure, economical transportation for only$850,962-7772 (w) 493-0610 (h).WANTED10 SPEED USED BIKE Good Con ReasonablePrice Contact Arthur at 753-2240 rm1413 leavemsg.Papers from all courses/divisions wanted forInquiry Magazine. Submit two copies to IdaNoyes Cloakroom.TOY TRAINS wanted Dead or Alive, LGB,Lionel, American Flyer, etc. and condition.924-4103.PEOPLE WANTEDHealthy non-smoking paid volunteers soughtfor research into the common cold. Call 791-3713.Healthy non-smoking paid volunteers withonset of a common cold within prior 24 hourssought for research project. Call 791-3713.People needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language processing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962-8859.We are observing children in their homes for astudy of development conducted through theDept of Education. If you wish to participateand your child is approaching his/her first bir¬thday please call 962-1554 on weekdays from 9-5.NEED dependable grad studenfs to research &write on academic topics. Pays per page; workat home. Send resume to Mr. Stein, Rm. 600,407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 60605.Good driver wanted for a very part-time even¬ing job (involving some 4 or 5 hours of drivingper week) for a faculty member. Please call241-5901 or 962-8852. Graduate student prefer¬red.New Regents Park Health Club & Snack Bar.5020 S. Lake Shore Drive Chicago, III.Part-time help wanted-available immediatelyOpenings for Wed. 5-10pm. Fri. 5-10pmSat. 7am-2pm. Sat 2pm-10pm.Sun. l-7pmCall Mike Anselmo Manager 288-5050SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.Processor/Typist/Editor: JAMES BONE, 363-0522 PRECISION PLUS TYPING IBM WordProcessor-Fast accurate service at reasonablerates includes editing. 324-1660.Moving and Hauling. Discount prices to staffand students from $12/hr. With van, or helpersfor trucks. Free cartons delivered N/C Packing and Loading services. Many other ser¬vices. 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 com¬pletion. References available. LOSETH CON¬STRUCTION CO. 363-2202.PROFESSIONAL TYPING, reasonable 684-6882Passport Phto While-U WaitModel Camera 1342 E. 55th 493 6700TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.WRITING A PAPER? Let wordpower type itfor you on an IBM computer, low rates, freedelivery. Editing service. 486 2683.HYDE PARK PSYCHOTHERAPYASSOCIATES: We work together to offer helpfor a wide range of problems. Most of our of¬fices are in the university area. Answering svc.288 2244.TYPING - Experienced Secretary typesReports, Dissertations, Tables - All Material,Grammar Corrected. 1 Day Service MostCases. 667 8657.MOVING SERVICE using van. Call LARRY.Lowest rates. Furniture, boxes, etc. 743-1353.General and legal typing services. Promptpick up and delivery. Contact Victoria Gordon(752-1983).Roosevelt Univ LSAT GMAT Prep-Loop &Suburbs, Free Sample Class at RU 6 30 LSAT3/29, GMAT 3/28. 341-3660.SCENESWRITERS' WORKSHOP PL2-8377GALA Speakers Bureau meets tonite, 8.30 at5615 S. Woodlawn. 962-9734 for more details.German Club Film, "Haus Ohne Huter”(w/subtitles) on Thurs. 2/23 at 4:30 pm inQuantrell.U. of C. DEMOCRATS MEETING; Wed Feb22, 5400 S. Harper, apt 1103, buzzer 36. 7:30pmAll Students are Welcome, Call 241 6881 for info. mmmIndependent, non-sectarian PRO-LIFE groupmeets Wednesdays 7:30 pm Ida Noyes 3rdfloor.LOST AND FOUND2/9, between 56th & Blackstone & Ida Noyes,ladies timex watch, brown band, gold faceReward. Call Carol at 753-2176 days.LOST: Sat 2/11 KEYS on MIT keychain with ablack whistle. Call Meg 3-3541 or 493-5021.RIDESGREYHOUND CHARTER TO NYC - ONLY$90 round trip U.C. STUDENTS ONLY! CALL947-0558 TODAY.Ride needed to Ann Arbor, Ml nearly anyweekend. Will share costs. Jim 363 7705, eves.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.THE GROUPGALA hosts a discussion/coffeehouse everyTues at 9pm at 5615 S. Woodlawn Preced at 8 byinformal Coming Out rap group. All interestedmen & women, old & new are welcome. 9629734.STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERFebruary Classes-SPEED READING-MCAT_DAT._4WK/GMAT/LSAT/SAT/ACT-March ClassesGRE_SAT-.MCAT-.DAT_wirwi roeMCAT * SAT * LSAT • OMAT * OMfone sevcM • one so • ocat • vat • matNTWOUCnON TO LAW SCHOOL • STCCO SCAOMGSSAT*SSAT*OAT ACMCVtMfNTS*ACT*C»AOSH * MBKP • MS < n m * CCfmo • noMCLU*con«*n«tCMS*NFe iacsioncs <£ MM. MKR, FALL MTBMVfSCowrsss oonMsm»y jpdud fisubwprograms and hours Van any cenisr orass lor routes* •>* «e mak* thaipeoisncs Spaad Resdwg Course•eamros Free Demo tessor*—Ce» >o<days A tmosARLINGTON HEIGHTSCNCAfiO CENTERNGNLANDPARKLA GRANGE COTTER 437-6650764-5151433-7410352-5040OMBSiM* •*» Out, Cm 'C*MMs>«ta*>ua Cess Nawftco To GALA DISCOGALA hosts a dance - Sat Feb 25 from 9PM till1AM at International House. A mere $3 with ID$4 others. Refreshments - music - a hot winternight. Info: 962 9734 funded by SGFC.THE MEDICI ON 57THDELIVERS!Mon-Thurs: 4-11:30pmFri: 4pm-12:30amSat.: lpm-12:30amSun: lpm-11:30pm667 7394DP RESEARCHASSISTANTTo assist in the development and support ofsurvey research projects. Areas of work willinclude one or more of the following development or support activities: Large-scaledatabase development, computer assisteddata collection, data reduction methodologies,micro or mainframe interface and dataretrieval systems. Support activities would inelude sample and questionnaire design, datacollection, SAS/SPSS analysis, qualityassurance, data retrieval, and data filemanipulation.Successful candidates will have a minimum ofone year computer experience with UC, HARRIS, or microcomputers OR one year experience with SAS/SPSS, IF PS, LOTUS 123, ordatabase systems AND a strong desire to bepart of a state-of-the-art survey operation.15-20 hours a week; $5.50-7.50 hourly salary.Call Frances at 962-8953.An Affirmative Action/Equal OpportunityEmployer.ZENITH DATA SYSTEMSHampton Business Machines offers a 20% Cash& Carry Discount on Zenith Data SystemsComputer Hardware and Software. Until2/29/84. Turn ad into receptionist at 5556 N.Elston, Chicago. IL 60630. Call for apt. 774-2556.Monday-Friday 9am to 5:30pm. Est. 1967. Askfor Jim Nealon.STUDENT GOVERNMENTNext ASSEMBLY MEETING Thurs 2 237:00pm Stuart 105. All are welcome. LET SGWORK FOR YOU! AUDITIONSUndergraduates, Graduates, and Facultybring a friend to:The Browning Version by Terence Rattiganfirst floor Reynolds Club (Theatre)Fri. Feb. 24, 1-5andSat. Feb. 25, 1-4Director: Elizabeth MishlerTechnical Director : Christopher JordanPASU MEETINGTomorrow at 8pm in Ida Noyes library therewill be a meeting of the Polish-American Student Union. Every Monday there is a PolishConversation meeting in Harper 102 from 34pm.SG HOUSING LISTLOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT? StudentGovernment has a housing list that can helpyou, revised weekly. Only 25 , 3rd fl Ida NoyesRoom 306.UJA/JUFThe University of Chicago's United Jewish Ap¬peal Campus Campaign will be in the SpringQuarter. Volunteers are wanted in all depart¬ments to help organize and run it. Call us at752-1127 weekdays between 9am and 4pm.COPYING& PRINTINGHi speed & quality Xerox Duplicators gearedto Student/Faculty needs. Low prices We'refast. Quant, Disct. Copyworks 5210 S. Harper288 2233.JOIN HOTLINEConsider yourself a caring person/Want tolearn valuable communications skills andmeet new people? Think about joining the UCHotline. To find out about spring training program, come to an information meeting on Wed.Feb. 22, 7pm on Ida Noyes 3rd floor.ATTENTION USFCUMEMBERS:First Annual Meeting and General Electionsfor Board of Directors on Thursday, Feb. 237 00 pm, Cloister Club, Ida Noyes.THEY'RE COMINGTune in Friday for further details.DOES YOUR MINDMATTER?It does to us. Earn money by participating instudies of left-right brain function. Right andleft-handers needed. Call 962-7591 MOVIES 11 pmFeb. 21/22 Shake, Rattleand RollFeb. 28/29 The ProducersMarch 6/7 Joe JacksonConcertMarch 13/14 TommyROCK VIDEOSEach Friday Night, 11 30 pm -1 amMembership required21 and overBUILD YOUR FUTUREWITHAN MBA FROM IIT.The IIT-MBA offers you these advantages:• Emphasis on implications of technological advances for organizationand management, business operations and corporate strategy• Instruction by a full-time faculty experienced in business• Small class size Advantageous for classroom dialogue and studentinteraction• Specializations in Accounting, Finance, Industrial Management, In¬formation Resources Management. Industrial Marketing and Re¬search and Engineering Management.• Two convenient locations: Downtown at 77 South Wacker and MamCampus at 31st and State.• Classes offered days, evenings, and weekends for part-time or full¬time study.Illinois Institute of TechnologyON CAMPUS RECRUITINGFebruary 24th 1*4:30 PMPlacement CenterThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 21, 1984—15MEDIAANDPOLITICSPartners or Adversaries?John D. CallawayDirector of William Benton Fellowshipsin Broadcast JournalismAssistant Professor in the Department of Historyand Behavioral Science, and Director of theHiPSS ProgramGeoffrey R. StoneProfessor in the Law SchoolMary Ellen GuestPolitical consultant for theJohn Glenn campaign Norman NieProfessor in the Department of Political Scienceand Research Associate for the NationalOpinion Research CenterTUESDAY, FEBRUARY21 • 8:00 p.m. - SWIFT LECTURE HALLRefreshments to followFunded by SGFC • Sponsored by the Academic Affairs Committee of Student GovernmentTHE MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARD andTHE ORGANIZATION OF BLACK STUDENTSPresentIG1L SCOTT-1 HERON| FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24MANDELHALLSTUDENTS $7.00 (Limit 2 tickets/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 accepted■ • • • • w.v.’w.y.wi’wi'iv.vv, ’ Iv'.V.V.V.V