—~— 1The Chicago MaroonVolume 93, No. 39 The University of Chicago ©Copyright 1984 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 28, 1984MAB autonomy challengedLenny Glasser at aScott-Heron concert. PHOTO BY JEFF TAYLORsound board at Friday’s Gil By Jeffrey TaylorIt is the worst week of thecoldest month of the harshestwinter in Chicago history. It isthe tenth day of February,1982, and the temperature is 20degrees below zero.Waiting in the warmth ofMandel Hall, the technicaldirector of the University ofChicago Major ActivitiesBoard (MAB) has begun tosweat. The truck containingevery piece of light, sourd andproduction equipment for to¬night’s Joan Armatrading con¬cert is more than three hourslate, and customary pre-ccn-cert tension among MABmembers is giving way tosomething little short ofpanic.GALA resolution affirmedBy Nathan SchoppaThe Student Government As¬sembly voted Thursday to rec¬ommend that the Universityclarify its policy concerningdiscrimination against homo¬sexuals on campus. Membersof the Gay and Lesbian Alli¬ance (GALA) point to the Asse¬mbly’s move to demonstrate tothe administration that gayshave the support of the stu¬dents. \In other matters, the Asse¬mbly passed a resolution con¬demning the refusal of the 21stPrecinct of the Chicago PoliceDepartment to release infor¬mation on local crimes to theMaroon. SG hopes to help forcethe 21st Precinct to reversethat policy.At the same meeting, Stu¬dent Government votedagainst joining the AmericanAssociation of University Stu¬dents (AAUS). To become amember of the organization,for which University PresidentHanna Gray works as an advi¬sor, SG would have had to pay$175.The Assembly’s vote in favorof supporting the gay’s effortsis only one step in the gays’lengthy campaign to have theUniversity guarantee in writ¬ing that there would be no dis¬crimination on the basis of“sexual orientation.” Accord¬ing to J.T. Kittredge, a repre¬sentative of GALA, their pro¬posal at the meeting was thefirst time that they had gonepublic with their campaign.Kittredge said that the pur¬pose of having the SG Asse¬mbly support them was to re¬duce the chance that theadministration would feel con¬fronted when formally ap-InsideSports proached concerning the mat¬ter.On the campaign, Kittredgesaid, “This is a very liberal,open, and well-informed com¬munity. But there are legiti¬mate concerns. Gays havefears that they will be discri¬minated against. Discrimina¬tion against gays is one of themost virulent forms of dis¬crimination outside of the com¬ munity.”Kittredge said that with thenumerous pressures of life atthe University already exist¬ing, gay students and facultymust be free from any addedpressures. “We need the mes¬sage that we are fully accept¬ed,” Kittredge said.After the Assembly’s vote byacclamation, Kittredge saidcontinued on page 10 Finally, a call comes: thetruck is stranded on GarfieldBlvd., a stree off-limits to rigsof its size. It has squeezedunder a low archway, shearingits top to the tune of $2,000, andnow sits in front of anothereven lower tunnel just west ofthe Garfield El station.The MAB tech director getsinto his car and drives down55th St. to see what can bedone.After carefully guiding hisangry truck driver backthrough the first archway, thetech man devises an intricateroute to the University thatwill avoid underpasses andother obstacles. If all goeswel’, the show may yet beginon time.But, just two blocks from theMandel loading dock, truckand driver are stuck again,wheels spinning hopelessly onthe sheet of ice that is 58th St.The tech man, for want of bet¬ter ideas, calls University Se¬curity.As MAB workers and Securi¬ty officers undertake the frigidchore of hacking the truckfree, tempers flare at MandelHall. The Armatrading prod¬uction crew is furious and an¬tagonistic; remaining MABmembers are confused, tenseand impatient. They are under enormous pressure from beingsix hours behind schedule.The Armatrading band nowdemands seven grams of co¬caine from MAB’s ‘hospitality’personnel. Without it, they say,the show will not go on.The request is not unusual.Bands often ask MABmembers for illicit druhgs andother favors. But this time, ac¬cording to one former MAEmember, “Student funds wereused to buy cocaine for theJoan Armatrading band ”Christopher Scott, then MABCourt reverses Heirens decisionBy Hilary TillAfter 37 years of prison in¬carceration, convicted mur¬derer and ex-University of Chi¬cago undergraduate WilliamHeirens will not be set free, de¬spite a federal magistrate rul¬ing last year which ordered hisrelease. The US Court of Ap¬peals reversed the magis¬trate’s order Friday andblocked Heirens’ parole.In 1946, Heirens was a 17-year-old freshman at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, living inSnell Hall, when he committedwhat has been called “one ofthe most devastating crimesever in Cook County.” On Jan.6 of that year, “6-year-old Su¬zanne Degnan was taken fromher second-floor bedroom (inher North Side home), stran¬gled, and dismembered, withpieces of her body deposited incatch basins in the area”(“Dial U of C for Murder,”Maroon 5-10-83).After Heirens was caught, heconfessed to murdering Deg¬nan and two other women,blaming the killings on an evilalter ego. He later claimed hewas innocent, saying that the confession had been forced.Heirens, now 54, was sen¬tenced to serve three consecu¬tive life terms in prison for themurders. He has since appliedfor parole 15 times, claimingthat he is a “good risk” andthat he is rehabilitated. As amodel prisoner, Heirens “be¬came the first prisoner in Illi¬nois to receive a college degreewhile incarcerated.” (Maroon,5-10-83)Last year Federal Magis¬trate Gerald Cohn agreed withHeirens’ claims and orderedhis release on parole. Cohnruled that the parole board“applied illegal criteria” toHeirens’ parole applicationwhen they denied Heirens’ re¬lease.The state immediately ap¬ pealed Cohn’s unpopular deci¬sion. Suzanne Degnan’s sister,Betty Finn, was quoted lastyear as saying, “You cannotforget that somebody went inand murdered a sleeping six-year-old child. I don’t thinksomebody like that should havethe privilege of living in soci¬ety.”Cohn’s ruling was finally re¬versed Friday by the SeventhCircuit US Court of Appeals.The court’s decision effectivelyreversed a decision it made in1982 regarding the applicationof parole criteria in a casewhich was similar to Heirens’.Heirens will now take his caseto the US Supreme Court, ac¬cording to recent reports on thecase. Steve Muchnicktechnical director, nowMaroon advertising manager,disagrees. “My Board didn’tdo these things at all.” he said.“We felt there was t jo much atstake. Although I was therethat day, I knew nothing aboutany transactions of that na¬ture, and the topic was neverbrought up at subsequentmeetings.”Spokesman for this year’sBoard Steve Muchnick, com¬menting generally on the topicof hospitality, said “Manytimes, even tough the contractcalled only for certain things,we know just because the con¬cert business is the concertbusiness that they (bands)may want something com¬pletely different or somethingmore.“While you can rely on thecontract and say ‘hey, if it’snot in the contract, then you’renot getting it,’ that’s very badmanners in the concert busi¬ness. Generally,” he said,“from the minute that theseguys come in until the timecontinued on page sixIVI state chair denies racial riftMaroon wrestlers Gene ShinAll-Americanpage 13Karl Lietzan By Cliff GrammichAlthough State Sen. RichardNewhouse (D-13) questions thedirection of the policy of the In¬dependent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organi¬zation (IVI-IPO) (Maroon,2/21/84), that groups statechair sees no rift among blackand white independents.“The only rift is with (StateRep. Carol Moseley) Braun(D-26) and Newhouse talkingabout one,” IVI state chairSaul Mendelson told theMaroon.Mendelson can understandthe source of some Newhouseire at IVI, particularly due tothe group’s failure to supportthe state senator’s lawsuit toobtain changes in the originalproposed 1980 General Asse¬mbly remap. Overall, though,Mendelson believes his grouphas worked well towards gain¬ing political power for blacks.“I agree with him complete¬ly (about the lawsuit), but my objection is that all historystopped for him after thatday,” Mendelson said.Mendelson believes IVI hasbecome more open since heand other South Side membersof the organization took overits leadership positions in thesummer of 1982. During a lead¬ership battle then, the groupsplit along North Side-SouthSide lines as the South Sidersin the organization took overits leadership positions, whichgave Mendelson his currentIVI position.“He’s talking about differentIVI leadership,” Mendelsonsaid of Newhouse’s objectionsto the group.Mendelson has been particu¬larly pleased with IVI’s in¬creasing success in attractingblack members. While Ne¬whouse said IVI’s Far SouthSide chapter “should havebeen organized 20 vears ago.”Mendelson says recruitingproblems prevented the group’s formation before thefall of 1982.“Does he think we didn’twant to organize a chapterthere earlier?” Mendelsonsaid.City recent IVI efforts forvoter registration and blackcandidacies, Mendelson said,“the fact is that our recrod onnot only support black inde¬pendents but initiating, stimu¬lating, and promoting blackcandidacies has always beengood. It’s always been very dif¬ficult to recruit blacks into anorganization which has theimage of being white, liberal,and middle class, but nowwe’ve overcome that to someextent.”Whatever rift may exist be¬tween black and white inde¬pendents Mendelson believeswill be overcome. He notesthat among the more promi¬nent members nf TVT now areDanny Davis, 29th Ward alder-continued on page 10iPHOTOBYKCMORRISTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENTOF MUSICDonations Requested$3 adults$! studentsFor Information:University of ChicagoDepartment of Music5845 South Ellis AvenueTelephone: 962-8484FarfSastfcitcfienThis Weed'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 accepted^MUSlOMUSlOMUSlC^CJ3Tu3rvo THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT of MUSICPresents:Thursday, March 1 • Noontime Concert Series12:15 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallMarty Schoenhals, piano.Beethoven: Sonata op.7.Admission is free.Thursday, March 1 • Iris String Quartet8:00 p.m., Goodspeed Recital HallEvan Paris and Sandra Schwarz, violins; Laurel Wells,viola; and Elaine Scott Banks, cello.Works by Mozart, Shostakovich, and Dvorak.Chicago Debut.Admission is free.Friday, March 2 • Contemporary Chamber Players8:00 p.m., Mandel HallRalph Shapey, music directorWith soloists: Elsa Charlston, soprano; Brian Perry,trumpet; Andrea Swan, piano.Carl Ruggles: Vox Clamans in Deserto; Josef Tal: Imago;Lawrence Moss: Loves; Max Schubel: Divertimento forpiano, trumpet and orchestra. Admission is free.Saturday, March 3- University Symphony Orchestra8:30 p.m., Mandel HallBarbara Schubert, conductorBeethoven: Overture to Fidelio, op.72; Rachmanionoff:Der Totinsel (Isle of the Dead), op.29; Shostakovich: Sym¬phony No. 1 in F minor, op.10.Donation requested: $3; student, $1.Sunday, March 4 - Collegium Musicum8:00 p.m., Bond ChapelJeffrey Dean, director.Music for the Medici Popes: Sacred, Secular and In¬strumental Music from the Courts of Leo X (1513-21) andClement VII (1523-34). With Musique de Joye and GailGillispie and Ben Lane, guest instrumentalists.Admission is free.UPCOMING EVENTFriday, March 9 • Gabrieli String Quartet8:00 p.m., Mandel Hall.Beethoven, Britten, Tschaikovsky.Tickets: $9; UC student, $6. nXc.n.>XCLnXn* mUsiqmUsic^mUsic^ BRENTI . The Episcopal Church at the University of ChicagoHousePRESENTSBridge Over Troubled Waters:The Study of Theology & The Practice of MinistryA PUBLIC LECTUREBYMichael MarshallBISHOP OF WOOLWICH•CHURCH OF ENGLANDWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 19843:00 P.M.ROOM 208, SWIFT HALL<?• %K$ ALL FOLDED BUTNO PLACE TO PACK?RENT THE LUGGAGE YOU NEED-No minimum number of pieces-Stylish, high-quality luggage regularlysold at Fields and I. Magnin-Delivery and pick-upBUDGET LUGGAGE RENTALS878-7373Call for a free BrochureJoin 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.Oureveningservice remainsunchanged.Reservationsrequested.For reservations,call Ms. Barbara Smithat 493 2270. For youradded convenience,Chez Morry accepts AmericanExpress, lisa. Mastercharge andthe Chez Morry credit card Forinformation on how you can obtain yourChez Morry credit a-count. call 493 2270&hez^AQ)rrpFINE EUROPEAN CUISINEWEST END OF HUTCHINSON COMMONS10% discount to Court Theatre patrons with tickets theeve ofperformance at our beautiful garden resaturantlocated in Hutchinson Commons2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984Ethics and therapyA conference on Ethics and Therapythe Relational Self will be held March 3through 5. Sponsored by the UnitedMethodist Foundation at the U of C, theconference will have panelists from thefields of religion and social sciences.The featured speaker will be Dr. Ar¬chie Smith, a professor of pastoral psy¬chology at the Pacific School of Reli¬gion in Berkeley, CA. Smith’s book,The Relational Self: Ethics and Thera¬py from a Black Church Perspectivewill be the focus of the Monday discus¬sion.For more information, call DonMatthews at 363-7080.Friends of Channel 11WTTW/Channel 11 is seeking volun¬teers to work with the station’s tele¬vised subscription campaign, whichbegins March 2 and runs throughMarch 18.Volunteers are needed to work as telephone operators at the Channel 11studios, 5400 North St. Louis Avenue.To participate, contact Friends ofChannel 11, 583-5000, ext. 219.Bennett broadcastToday at 5 p.m., WHPK 88.3 FM willpresent William Bennett’s “The Shameof the Graduate Schools Revisited,”given last Tuesday on campus in theJohn Olin Lecture Series.Maritime heritage“Chicago’s Maritime Heritage” isthe subject of a conference to be heldMarch 2 and 3. Co-sponsored by theChicago Maritime Society and LoyolaUniversity, the events will take placeat the University’s lakeshore campus,6525 N. Sheridan Rd.Over 20 midwest historians, authors,and cultural leaders will participate.The conference is supported by the Illi¬nois Humanities Council, and is freeand open to the public. For more infor¬mation, call 670-3078.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGODEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHYSALISBURY CIRCLEPRESENTSJOHN HUDSONProfessor of GeographyNorthwestern UniversityTown Systems on the Great Plains4:00 pmThursday, March 1Pick LoungeFUNDING FROM SGFC Japanese challenge“You Bet Your Empire: The Japa¬nese Challenge to America” will be thetopic March 1 when John Zysmanspeaks at 4 p.m. in Wieboldt 303.Zysman, a professor of politicalscience at the University of California,Berkeley, is interested in contem¬porary industrial policies of advancedstates and international competition inhigh technology.The talk is sponsored by the Programon Interdependent Political Economy,the Center for the Study of IndustrialSocieties and the Committee on PublicPolicy.For more information, call 753-2222.Shedd Aquarium filmsFree films at the Shedd Aquariumduring March will include “Birds of theArctic,” “Plankton: The Endless Har¬vest,” “Round Cape Horn,” and “MobyDick: The Great American Novel.”The films are shown throughout theday in the Aquatic Science Center.Spring hours at the Aquarium startMarch 1, and are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ad¬mission to the Aquarium is $2 foradults, free on Thursdays.Inquiry out todayThis year’s first issue of Inquiry willappear on campus today. The articles,originally written by students forcourse work, range from such topics ascivilization and nature to the philoso¬phical implications of metabolism.The student-run magazine, whichhas a history of financial difficulties, isbeing funded by the Office of the Deanof the College. There will be two issuesthis year.One thousand copies will be distri¬buted to various buildings on campus.SG riders’ board openStudent Government reminds all stu¬dents that a free rides board is avail¬able for use in the Reynolds Club base¬ment. The rides board, located justoutside the College mail room, worksby matching rides available during va¬cation with people looking for rides. If you can offer someone else a ride or ifyou are looking for one, check the ridesboard.Field Museum filmsThe Edward E. Ayer Film LectureSeries will be shown every Thursday inMarch and April at the Field Museum.The free films will feature journeys toDenmark, Africa, Spain, Peru, Israel,and Tibet.Films are shown at 1:30 p.m. For aschedule of films, call 322-8854.Dance for NicaraguaCAUSE and two university bands.Dumb Ra and the Groovey Times, areco-sponsoring a dance March 2 at IdaNoyes from 8 p.m. to midnight.The bands will donate their fees to aprogram to bring medical aid to thepeople of Nicaragua. Slides frm Ni¬caragua will be shown, and a volunteerdonation of $2 is requested.Jackson programThe Hyde Park Area Jesse Jacksonfor President Committee will host aprogram March 6 entitled, “The Politi¬cal Significance of the Jesse JacksonCampaign.”The program includes a film, “Le¬gacy of a Dream” on the civil rightsstruggles of Martin Luther King. Jr.,and three speakers: Thomas Todd, act¬ing executive director of OperationPUSH; Michael Preston, visiting pro¬fessor of political science at the Uni¬versity of Chicago; and Robert Stark,professor at Northeastern Illinois Uni¬versity.The event will be held at 7 p.m. in theNorth Lounge of the Reynolds Club.The Jackson for President Commit¬tee was formed recently to raisemoney, publicize Jackson's candidacy,and canvass voters to support him inthe March 20 Democratic presidentialprimary election. An area appearanceby the candidate is also beingplanned.The committee meets every Wednes¬day at 7 p.m. in Room 305, Ida NoyesHall. New members are welcome. Thecommittee receives phone messages at962-9733.Chicago Literary ReviewDEADLINETOMORROWFEBRUARY 29All submissions must be inthe CLR box, Room 303, IdaNoyes Hall, by 6:00 p.m.• Get Literary! •The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984—31C today: safer than what? Letting the East speakTo the editor:In light of the rape at the 59th St. ICstation on Feb. 4, we are revolted thatspokespeople on behalf of the IC de¬clare the IC to be “safer” than it usedto be. The article seemed as much an¬other shop-worn apology for the poli¬cies of the Chicago police and U of Csecurity as it did an honest attempt toaccount for the human tragedy andcontinued violence that stalks HydePark. The SECC’s Robert Mason’scomment that “to be realistic (sic?)these things do happen” (e.g., presum¬ably, the Feb. 4 rape) sounds like an¬other shrug-of-the-shoulders excuse forviolence as the natural course of eventsin Chicago, and does nothing to as¬suage the pain caused by this crime.Moreover, the publication of this ap¬parent consensus on the relative safetyof the IC shortly after the rape incidentreflects an abominable lack of sensitiv¬ity to the victim (and her friends andfamily) of this violent crime. Imaginethe reaction of those people affected bythis rape reading Mr. King’s front¬page article, “Spokesmen Find ICTo the editor:I am writing to commend Mr. Bur-relli on his much-needed rebuke ofurban boosters from around thecountry (Feb. 21). My father also toldme that places to live should be judgedpurely on the good people who inhabitthem. During my youth, as we movedfrom Juneau to Ontario to Augusta insearch of a good location for Dad’s“Surf ’n Safari Shoppe,” we found that,from West to East, each area wasabout as similar as the last. Althoughnot gifted with Mr. Burrelli’s penetrat¬ing grasp of sociology, we foundthrough experience that a cityshouldn’t be evaluated “on the basis ofits geology, crime rate, culture, benev¬olence, or industry.”“Absolutely on the mark!” I crywhen thinking of the other family expe¬riences. Did my uncle weigh the re¬cords of the major (or minor) leaguesports teams, or perhaps the geology ofBismarck, Helena, Fort Collins, orIdaho Falls during his job as travelingdistributor and sales manager ofSchwinn unicycles? Of course, such re-ay ADAW KATZ Safer”? What possible difference doesit make if the IC stations are allegedlysafer if people are still being raped androbbed in their environs? Safer? Saferthan what! ? I am not saying that the ICis not less dangerous than it was yearsago — statistically, this may or maynot be the case, but comparing the Feb.4 and related incidents with the crimesof the past smacks of an attempt to le¬gitimate the failure of the police andsecurity personnel to protect this vic¬tim and, by implication, other resi¬dents of this community.To say that the IC is “safer” is a sadmixture of propaganda and callous¬ness. Would it not be truer to the situa¬tion — and more in touch with the con¬crete, human tragedy of this woman —to say that the IC is not as safe as itshould be, and therefore what is thiscommunity and its law enforcementpersonnel going to do about it?Mark WallaceEllen RossGraduate studentsDivinity Schoolsearch would have been absurd. As ex¬pected he found each city equally re¬ceptive to his unique inventory and (hestill maintains) especially low prices.Remarkably enough, although thegirls’ basketball team in Fairfield,Iowa was the finest in the state when hepassed through, it seemed to have ab¬solutely no effect on the PEOPLEWHO LIVED THERE in regard to hissales volume. Each place had aboutthe same tolerance and respect for ahard-working salesman. Each townand city had about the same size wel¬come mat for a weary but ambitioustraveller in search of his fortune.Whether Cheyenne, Sioux Falls, orCalgary (other places in which wesought to launch the “Surf ’n SafariShoppe”); whether a small town orlarge city; THE PEOPLE WHOLIVED THERE tended to be the mostimportant defining characteristic forboth the happiness of our stay and ourrecurring bankruptcies.S. LichtenthalSecond-year studentEngineering To the editor,Regarding C.M. Naim’s criticism ofMarvin Zonis’ 12 February WoodwardCourt lecture (Maroon, 21 Feb.) andDaniel Brumberg’s and Edward Reis-man’s defense of Zonis/criticism of(Maroon, 24 Feb.): I think the centralissue is slipping away. Orientalism isthe issue. Orientalism is the study andrepresentation of the Orient (particu¬larly the Middle and Far East) by theOccident (Europe and the UnitedStates). An operative principle of Ori¬entalism is that the Orient cannotspeak for itself. This representation in¬fluences foreign policy and reaches amass audience through policy-directedOrientalists — usually political scien¬tists or area studies specialists — whohave access to the relevant centers ofpower: government, multinational cor¬porations, and the media.Policy-directed Orientalists mustevaluate the civilization under studyonly insofar as it has an importance forthe foreign policy of an Occidentalstate. Thus the distortion inherent in allrepresentation is compounded by theselective interests of the Occidentalpower in question. Hence a recent topicof interest (and funded research) is theinfluence of Islam on the politicalprocess of certain Middle Easternstates. Ultimately Orientalism is a sys¬tem of power: of the examiner over theexamined, and of a dominant state overa dominated one.Naim correctly points out a centralthesis of Orientalism: the (industrializ¬ed) West is seen as complex, but “Afri¬ca and Asia are seen as merely prob¬lematic.” A problem exists to besolved, surmounted, and done awaywith. More often than not the ‘problem’which a policy-directed Orientalist hasto ‘solve’ turns on the inexplicable re¬sistance of an indigenous people to theexpansion of American capitalism andinfluence and its intrusion upon theirsociety. The idea that there can be anyhappiness or meaning outside the con¬text of American capitalism — or Sovi¬et communism, for that matter — istruly baffling to many who serve theimperial state, and so we have a spateof books which locate the basis for thenatives’ quixotic behavior in nationalcharacter traits: ‘the Asian mind,’ forexample, places a low value on humanlife while ‘the Arab mind’ cannot con¬ceive of a non-violent way of life. Thesetraits, accessible only to the ‘expert,’are used to ‘explain’ the resistance ofthese groups to the continued expan¬sion of American power and control. I was not at the 12 February Wood¬ward Court lecture, and so cannot com¬ment on the majority of Naim’s criti¬cism of Zonis’ lecture there. However,it must be pointed out that there areseveral students who take serious issuewith Zonis’ representation of Iranianhistory and politics. It is not Zonis’ al¬leged bias towards Israel but his in¬creasing involvement in policy-direct¬ed Orientalism which these studentscontend is at issue.Doubtless there are now some ratherinteresting representations of Ameri¬can history and politics made at Te¬heran University, in revolutionaryIran. While it is fairly easy to under¬stand the hostility with which scholarsin Iran explain the growth and uses ofAmerican imperial power — an Occi¬dentalism, if you will — we must notoverlook the chauvinism, contempt,and arrogance which is an integral partof policy-directed Orientalist discoursein this country.John EganGraduate student.Political ScienceSMO fundingTo the editor:Two Mondays ago, SGFC ended Stu¬dent Music, an organization headed byRussel Forster, by rescinding its funds.We are disturbed by the Finance Com¬mittee’s inability to recognize the obvi¬ous importance of SMO and the depthof that organization’s support.Many students were grateful thatSMO provided an outlet for student mu¬sicians to play and be heard by otherstudents. In a responsible, hard-work¬ing fashion Russ has struggled to fulfilla real need for the student community.In Spring of 1983 he established Musicon the Quads, an activity that providedfree music at noon for students by stu¬dents. Apparently good ideas and hardwork are nothing compared to the nec¬essary paper work. But SMO doesn’tneed to hold Wednesday night meetingsto calculate the number of paper clipsneeded to hold together budget propos¬als and meeting minutes. Elaboratebureaucratic procedures in this casesimply are not necessary for its suc¬cessful operations.Considering the thoughtless, disturb¬ing treatment of SMO, we express ourlack of confidence in the Finance Com¬mittee’s zeal for promoting successfulstudent activities.David Kayand 44 othersHow they treat salesmen^doptaSmokerAdoption Papersl as a nonsmoker, will take it upon myself to helpon the path to smokelessness Fa my part l willprovide you with constant encouragement, fruit and peanuts if need be.and a shaulda to cry onl_ the foster nonsmoker will try to cajole the aforemen¬tioned smoker to continue on the road to smokelessness following the Great AmericanSmokeout but this formal arrangement will conclude 24 hours after if beganSigned Signed(nonsmoker) (lemporaiy smoker) 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 EditorSondra KruegerFeatures Editor Frank LubySports EditorJesse HalvorsenGrey City Journal EditorBrian MulliganGrey City Journal EditorArthur U. EllisPhotography EditorKC MorrisPhotography EditorPurnima DubeyAssistant Features Editor Chris ScottAdvertising ManagerRobin TotmanOffice ManagerJoshua SalisburyBusiness ManagerLinda LeeProduction ManagerCampbell 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, Edward Hemstadt, Keith Horvath, Mike Kotze,Cathy LeTourneau, Mike Levin, Jeff Makos, Ravi Rajmane, Leah Schlesinger, NathanSchoppa, Geoff Sherry, Koyin Shlh, Ellyn Streed, Jim Thompson, Bob Travis, MichelleWard-. -4—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984Hayes: University’s loss, district’s gainTk\r Flon C nlrimn iL i j.. »i _ j iBy Dan Sakura/rs one o/7i/e’s wonderful ironies that the Univer-SK °Jh 'h',™gu ,s reP™ented in Congress by a manlike Charles Hayes. A former labor union leader andcivil rights activist, Hayes defeated a crowded fieldof candidates in a special primary to fill HaroldWashington s vacated Congressional seat. When hewas sworn into office in September, 1983, Hayespledged to. redistribute tax money to economicallydepressed areas, bolster the National Labor Rela¬tions Board, push for progressive income tax policy,cut military expenditures significantly, and support3 nucJear weapon’s freeze. The Pritzker School ofMedicine should take comfort in the fact that its Con¬gressional representative is a leading advocate forsocialized medicine. And the infamous “ChicagoSchool” of economics is represented by a man whostarted organizing labor unions in the thirties whoalso is a strong advocate of nationalizing major in¬dustries.But the University’s loss is the district’s gain.Charles Hayes stands firmly resolved to alleviate thehuman suffering found outside the University’sborders. A district suffering from intolerably highunemployment, which is accompanied bv a host ofother social ills, needs a man like Charles Hayes toturn this country around.DS: What are your priorities and what legislationto you plan to sponsor?My priorities are: jobs, fighting unemployment,trying to find a solution to the human misery that re¬sults from being out of a job. Hence, I guess, I amconcerned about two pieces of legislation that are re¬lated to that. One is trying to get some kind of bill outthat will provide for public works, infrastructure,something like what I came through during the Roo¬sevelt Administration. It is very much needed foryouth. In my district we have 50-60% youth unem¬ployment. The other broader thing which I am con¬cerned about, 1 hope to talk with others, which is an¬other interest, is some kind of legislation that wouldprovide for either jobs or incomes. I know, it soundslike a dream. I think that people don’t need to be in aposition of long term, structural employment. I thinkthat they are being conditioned to accept 7-8% unem¬ployment, as full employment. For those people thatthere are no jobs for should be provided. I thinkthere ought to be legislation that forces the govern¬ment to either provide those people with meaningfuljobs at a liveable wage or give them an income.Don’t leave them like the steelworkers are today,with their unemployment compensation exhaustedand nowhere to go. I guess what it amounts to perpet¬ual unemployment compensation.DS: What do you think of a program that wouldprovide workers with federally backed loans to in¬vest in their own plants?CH: I haven’t given that too much thought, it maywork in some instances, but I don’t think it wouldwork as a general rule. Where are the markets goingto come from? One of the things that is hurting thesteelworkers is the imports. We are pushing, in thissession, a bill that would put a 15 percent ceiling onsteel imports.DS: How will import quotas resurrect the steel in¬dustry? What we need is capital investment.CH: How do you, and this is what has me all bum-fuddled, take an outfit like Exxon, or some of theother big outfits that have their fingers in steel, whohave an insatiable appeitite for profits, and they aregoing to put their money where they can to get thegreatest amount of return, even though it might be,in some instances, stupid, because if they producesomething and don’t have customers, they losemoney. I don’t think that US Steel needs governmenthelp. Two or three years ago they had a hearing inChicago, and they made certain commitments to USSteel. And the union more recently made concessionsto US Steel, from the members. They closed anyway.If they feel they can make more money by invest¬ments elsewhere, in other industries they will do it. Idon’t think that is the answer.DS: What about small business?CH: I think in terms of small businesses I have adifferent attitude. I think that the government has tobegin to make loans more available. In my district, Ithink more jobs would be created and maintainedjust by helping small businesses on the brink of bank¬ruptcy by making loans more available.DS: How about providing loans for small, minorityowned manufacturing firms?CH: I think there ought to be some encouragement,some inducement, on the part of government withloans, to help people and train people. One problem Ihave found, on my short time on the Small BusinessCommittee, is that only one out of five small busin¬esses succeed. For several reasons: First, they don’thave the working capital, right away they have acash flow problem, the government should help solvethat. Second, some of them don’t know how to man¬age so they have to be trained. And third, we foundout in the construction industry, that they try to keepout or drive out small construction firms by with¬holding bonds. You can’t get a construction job if youcan’t get a bond. I found that out in South Carolina;we were down in Columbia, South Carolina, and oneof the biggest problems for people in small businessis that they couldn’t get bonding arrangements so they couldn’t get a contract.DS: What specific types of industries would youlike to see in the district?CH: They say we are fast moving to a service econ¬omy, rather than an industrial economy. I would liketo see the survival of steel and related industries.Chicago used to be one of the steel parts captials ofthe world, that’s gone now. I would like to see some ofthe other industrial products necessary for automo¬biles or something of that sort. We used to have, backin the old days, a few furniture manufacturers herein Chicago. I was organizing for a while in thoseplaces, but they’re gone. I came out for the meat in¬dustry, and I don’t think we will ever see Chicago onthe slaughtering end for livestock, because I don’tthink even a hog himself likes to be transported intothis city.DS: Do you think one of the main causes of unem¬ployment in the United States is “deindustrializa¬tion” or capital flight?CH: I think so.DS: What specific types of legislation are neces¬sary to stop this?Charles HayesCH: Some of the incentivrs they have for runningto the suburbs and running out of the city, and run¬ning to the south need to be dealt with.DS: How about the tendency to flee overseas to socalled “enterprise zones” where wages are low andthe workplaces are dangerous?CH: That is another place where we can stop it.Here again, is another issue I am not as familiar withas I hope to be. Certainly some of the tax breaks thatbig industry gets for closing down a plant need to beeliminated. I understand that U.S. Steel, who justthrew 15,000 people out of work is going to get a bonusfrom our tax money, for doing it. I think these arethings that we need to stop.DS: Would you favor a tax on profits that return tothe United States from foreign investments?CH: I think so.DS: Do you see any relationship between lowwages overseas in “enterprise zones” and ThirdWorld countries and U.S. dipolomatic and militarysupport for right-wing-authoritarian governmentlike South Korea, the Philippines, and Chile?CH: Sure, there is a direct relationship betweenthem, I think that most of our economic interests de¬pend on protecting these anti-people leaders. Oursupport for governments in Central America is basedon our investments. It’s predictable. Grenada is anexample; we went over under the guise of saving themedical students, half of them have already goneback. We found out (on the Congressional BlackCaucus fact-finding trip to Grenada) that they werein no real danger. The thing that seems clear to me isthat we have a responsibility now to protect themand to heal their sick economy, where you have ahigh rate of unemployment. The most likely thingyou can do on an island that size, where the naturalresources are very limited, you have coconuts, a fewbananas and nutmeg, is going to be tourism.The airport, that you hear so much about, that’s anecessary thing that we have to take responsibilityfor building . But when the tourist trade comes backwe will see who is controlling that. They will controlit in Grenada in the same way they do in Puerto Ricotoday. That is my point and and this is what concernsme, we get blinded by our own greed.DS: In terms of nationalizing industries, do youthink the federal government should nationalize keyindustries?CH: I think there are certain industries the govern¬ment ought to control. One case that I think aboutquite a bit is oil. They manipulate our lives with thecontrol of energy. I think we could really protect thepublic if there was government control. They driedup the oil in a fictitious shortage and had peopleshooting one another in line.DS: How about public utilities?CH: Utilities is another area that I think the government should take over. Just talk to some of these people on fixed incomes, they are in a position nowwhere they have to make a choice between eatingand heating. I think the whole field of medicineshould be included, we ought to learn our lesson. Sen¬ator Kennedy and someone in the House introduced abill that I will have to deal with when I go back. Itwould give the people more protection from risingmedical costs. The answer to holding down medicalcosts is greater federal control, I say this knowingthat doctors will get mad at me. You may be aspiringto be a doctor...DS: Oh no, not me.CH: I think we should prolong people’s lives andnot deprive them the right to live because they don’thave money. This is the bottom line.DS: In terms of foreign policy, what do you thinkwe should do about South Africa?CH: I support the Gray Amendment, which pro¬poses a limit on further investment in South Africa.Which I was all for, but it doesn’t go far enough.DS: How about the Solarz bill, which, among otherthings prohibits the sale of Krugerrands, in thiscountry?CH: I think it goes further, but, hell, the first thingwe have to do is get the occupants of the White Houseand their supporters out of office. They control theSenate and even the bill that contains the GrayAmendment, is sitting before the Senate, and itschance of passing is virtually nil. So I think ourcountry’s reputed interest in human rights is afarce.DS: We are concerned about totalitarianism in theSoviet Union, but not when it is in South Africa.CH: That’s right. And God knows I think tradeunions should be free to exist in every country inevery country in the world. But our interest and con¬cern in Poland was bypocrisy. What we did to the aircontrollers is a case in point. We are for unionism inWarsaw, but not in Chicago. Black people in Africahave a right to an integrated union. That is one waywe can break up apartheid. I am against the wholesystem of apartheid, the deprivation of human rightswhere the minority sits on top of the majority likethey do in South Africa.DS: In terms of Central America, do you think weshould continue support for the Contras, and theright wing governments of Guatemala. Honduras,and El Salvador?CH: I really believe we are moving towards aperiod of change, not by our suddenly understandingof the fallacies of our position and changing it. I thinkwe w ill be forced into a position where we will have tochange. I am reminded of what I was taught inschool; Patrick Henry, remember that old saying ofhis, “Give me liberty or give me death.” I think themasses of people in Central America are saying to usand their no-good leaders. “You give me food, a de¬cent way of life, an education for their kids, someplace to live, or give me death.” And they are goingto fight to the death till they get it. This is the reasonyou are getting these wars between groups. W’e getthe most reactionary group and try to bolster them.We send the dollars down there, it goes into a few-hand and they use it for their own good and themasses of people don’t see any of it. And then the richpeople use it to subjugate the poor. I don’t think itwill happen that way very much longer. We are run¬ning into a position now where it just can’t last. Ithink we are sitting on a keg of dynamite. And theso-called “peacekeeping” mission in Beirut is afarce. We are interested in that oil over there, whycan’t we tell people that. We are interested in thegoodies, just like here in city government Racism isinvolved, but these people don’t want reform, be¬cause those who have been controlling the flow ofgoodies want them to continue to flow in the same di¬rection.DS: As a member of the Congressional BlackCaucus, where do you think it is headed and what doyou think its priorities are?CH: This Congress isn’t going to come up with anyreal changes in the direction of the Administration.First, we have to lay out our own budget and pointout the directions where we think the money shouldbe spent, that is one of the priorities of the CBC. Weknow full well that it will not be accepted, but wehave to develop dialogue. We want significant cuts inmilitary expenditures and more money for socialprograms for people. We have to give leadership inthat direction. This is not to say there are not otherswho support us, but because of what I consider to bea straightjacket that blacks and other minorities findthemselves in. with an administration that is ema¬sculating every single affirmative action programwe have, I think the CBC is an important mecha¬nism. I hope we increase our numbers in this elec¬tion, and there are good changes in several places,including the South, so we can give some leadership.I don’t think it is going to change unless people beginto rally themselves. I think we might have to go backto some of the tactics we used in the sixties, I thinkwe have to do some demonstrating.DS: What kinds of progressive coalitions need to beorganized to change things?CH: I think we have to coalesce with at least civilrights organizations, student groups, fraternal orga¬nizations, women’s movement, Central Americagroups. I think we have to coalesce with all those peo¬ple tn at ipa«t Hp heard and have some opportunity tocontinued on page 10The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984—5MABcontinued from page onethey leave, you want to give them ev¬erything they ask for, because it’s partof the job they do for you.”Ghallib Ghallab of theBut Muchnick, who was not a MABmember in 1982, dismissed the cocainecharge as “hearsay. I don’t think thatit happened,” he said, “and certainlyMAB funds were not used. We’re notstupid — that sort of thing just doesn’toccur.”Director of Student Activities IreneConley, who oversees MAB and otherstudent groups, said, “That (the co¬caine charge) certainly isn’t true asfar as I know, and I was there. It is truethat these guys walked out and de¬manded drugs,” she said, “but I haveno evidence that drugs were suppliedto them either by MAB or personalmoney.”Alleged impropriety aside, membersof the Major Activities Board controlan imposing 40 percent share of the Ac¬tivities Fee paid by every U of C stu¬dent. This, coupled with revenue fromconcert ticket sales, places seven stu¬dents in sole command of nearly$60,000 per year.They enjoy an autonomy unrivalledby any student organization except theMaroon.“They’re so autonomous that realis¬tically they will never have to answerto anyone in their decision-makingprocess,” said Harry Douglas, presi¬dent of the U of C Organization of Black Students (OBS). Douglas cooperatedclosely with MAB members in negotia¬tion and execution of the recent GilScott-Heron concert.Responsibility for MAB’s financialaffairs can be traced to three facultymembers: Student Activities ProgramDirector and official MAB advisorFriday’s concert in Mandel.Mary Jerz, Irene Conley, and Dean ofStudents in the University Charles DO’Connell. But the Board remains ad-Spokespersons for each of the candi¬dates for the Democratic presidentialnomination will debate the candidates’foreign policy positions in a forumsponsored by the Chicago Debating So¬ciety Tuesday at the Law School Audi¬torium from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. A re¬ception follows the debate.Each candidate has selected a repre¬sentative knowledgeable on foreignpolicy issues and associated with his Il¬linois campaign. The representative ofSenator Gary Hart will be Jack DuVall,the senator’s campaign speechwriterand his Illinois spokesperson. FormerY’ice President Walter Mondale will berepresented by Lewis Manilow, aforeign affairs advisor. Senator ErnestHollings will be represented by his Illi¬nois spokesperson, Bob Klaus.Debating for George McGovern willbe Jeff Smith, his Illinois coordinator.Barbara Wood, a Glenn delegate fromthe ninth Congressional District andformerly an aldermanic candidate inthe 43rd Ward, will speak for SenatorJohn Glenn. Speaking for the Reverend mittedly autonomous, free to spendlarge amounts of money with little au¬thorization.Does MAB need its autonomy tofunction effectively? “Unquestion¬ably,” said Muchnick. “Given the pe¬culiarity of the function of MAB...it salmost impossible to envision any kindof administrative scheme which wouldfold in well with the kind of negotiatingprocess that takes place.”“MAB’s is the kind of administrativefunction which is not really capable ofany sensible oversight, except perhapswithin the broadest boundaries of rea¬sonableness,” he said.Said Conley: “I am their oversight,and I would have to say they get goodoversight.”Others, like the Student GovernmentFinance Committee’s Rick Szesny, sayoversight of the Board is inadequate.“MAB doesn’t know what it’s beingcharged for when its spends money,”he said. “They are not cost-conscious,and they are not concerned with thebottom line.”“It would be one thing if it were theirmoney,” he added, “but it’s the Activi-Jesse Jackson, will be Jeanette Wilson,a Chicago attorney. The Askew andCranston campaigns have withdrawntheir representatives.Vincent Hillery, chancellor of theChicago Debating Society, will moder¬ate the debate. The format to be fol¬lowed begins with opening speeches ofseven minutes in length from each rep¬resentative. The reps will, at mini¬mum, address policy issues relating toCentral America and the Middle East,especially Lebanon, said Tasso Kaper,officer of the CDS and organizer of theforum. Other likely topics include nu¬clear weapons policy, protectionisttrade measures, US-Soviet relationsand the US-NATO relationship. Aperiod of 45 minutes for questions andanswers on these and related foreignpolicy issues follows the openingspeeches. To conclude the debate,there will be closing statements fromeach of the representatives of threeminutes in length. The reception fol¬lows the debate’s conclusion.Kaper said that the Debating Society ties Fee — it’s the students’ money.”“Irene is too close,” Szesny said.“There’s a different between being anadministrator and a member, and Ithink Irene is a kind of overgrownmember. With regard to MAB, Irene isnot fulfilling her responsibility as anadministrator.”“Irene Conley does her job well,”said OBS’ Douglas, “but I’m sure shedoesn’t know the Fleshtones from Ste¬vie Nicks from the B-52s, so she can’treally question the validity of their(MAB members’) decisions.”Conley herself says she has“something of a bias” towards MAB,but that she is still able to be objective.“I see my job as being biased towardstudent groups,” she said. “Part of myattachment to MAB is seeing some ofthe really excellent things it can doband has done over the years. I’ve en¬joyed it to the point where I can’t giveup my involvement to an assistanteven though I suppose officially Ishould.”This is the first of a two-part serieson the Major Activities Board. A fol¬low-up article will appear Friday.has sponsored public debate forums formany years. In addition to competingagainst other collegiate debate teamsand sponsoring intercollegiate parlia¬mentary debate tournaments, the CDS“sponsors debates between prominentfigures in fields of current public inter¬est,” stated Kaper. In the past, the CDShas put together public debates on suchissues as handgun control, the VietnamWar, the Equal Rights Amendment,nuclear energy, and capital punish¬ment.Kaper said that this debate is “thefirst of its kind undertaken by theCDS.” In contrast to the traditional de¬bate format, in which there are twosides debating against each other on aparticular resolve, this debate incorpo¬rates the viewpoints of six parties. Fur¬thermore, it is set in the context of thisspring’s presidential primaries andthus aims to present the Universitycommunity with opportunities to heardebates on the issues of the day.Today’s debate is open to the Universi¬ty community.Chris Gordon, Lenny Glasser, Ghallab Jazz Trio, load in prior toDemocratic respresentatives to debateBy Hilary TillConnecting collisions to extinctionBy Audrey L. GuzikThe earth is our home. We like tothink of it as safe, solid, and self-contained. We like to image that life rnearth just calmly evolves, continuous¬ly, gradually becoming extinct as it isreplaced by newer species. Any greatcatastrophes which we know about aregenerally far from home, kept distantby miles, or time. But the scale onwhich one measures time can drasti¬cally change this view of the earth. Anygeologist can tell you how drastic, con¬tinuous and dynamic are the eventswhich shape and reshape our planet.As evidence by the research of paleon¬tologist John Sepkoski (much of it incollaboration with David Raup), thehistory of life on earth is often intima¬tely tied with the history of the earth it¬self.“I used to think of Earth entirely as aclosed system,” says Sepkoski. Hisviews were changed by evidence beingamassed by himself and others in thefield which give increasing reasons toconsider the effects of extraterrestialinfluences upon the development of lifeon earth.Reflecting upon that for a moment, itseems logical that the environmentsavailable on earth could depend uponmany phenomanae external to theworld. For example, the relative posi¬tion of the sun determines tempera¬tures on the earth’s surface, and in¬teractions with the moon causes tides.As well, periodic impact of asteroids orcomets upon the earth’s surface couldcause sudden environmental changes,in turn inducing large — scale extinc¬tion of life. Sepkoski proposes that thishas happened, and more than once. Infact, it will probably happen again 15million years from now. In furtherfact, it seems that some such extinc¬tion occurs every 26 million years, ifthe patterns Sepkoski and Raup havefound in the data are accurate.ft—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, Gathering the data referred to is onlyone aspect of the research Sepkoski iscurrently engaged in. He described Uas a listing of “who lived where, andwhen.” This part of the research hasgenerated vast amounts of data de¬scribing species with the dates of theirappearances and their extinctions. “Itlooks like a phone bok,” says Sepkoski.Next the data must be subjected to sta¬tistical analysis, or “boiled down intosimple patterns”. These patterns sug¬gest much about the rates of extinc¬tions and the diversity of life at varioustimes. Theories formed from these pat¬terns can then be developed or tested.The 26 million year pattern of extinc¬tion which emerged in this work withRaup, was not expected.Terrestial cycles, affecting the sur¬face of the earth, tend to run under amillion years in length. Cycles of “deepearth”, happen on the scale ofhundreds of millions of years. This sug¬gests extra-terrestial cycles as asource of this periodic affect. Of theseextra-terrestial theories, says Sepkos¬ki, “one of the most interesting sug¬gests that the sun is not alone in itstravel through the galaxy. The sunmay have a small, (dark) companion.”This is especially exciting to Sepkoskiand his colleague because “it is one ofthe few times paleontological data hasbeen used to work out physical pheno-monae afecting the earth as a whole.”The binary star theory has been sug¬gested in a variety of contexts, as thesolution to a variety of problems. Theevidence associated with the work ofSepkoski and Raup leads to the conclu¬sion that this little star (referred to asthe “Deathstar” for obvious reasons),would have an orbit of 26 million years,which would periodically disturbcomets orbiting the solar system.Some of these would end up in coJ'isionwith Earth.There is other evidence for the peri¬ odic nature of these collisions, regard¬less of the cause. Evidence has comefrom the study of craters on the earth,as well as the “geochemical evidence”found in the study of sedimentaryrocks. Apparently there are manyways such a collision leaves it “signa¬ture” on the world. Evidence points toan impact with an object 5 to 10 kilome¬ters large as the basis for the extinc¬tion of the dinosaurs. Sepkoski ex¬plained that such an impact wouldhave the power of 1000 times the nu¬clear arms possessed on the earth.PHOTO BY KC MORRISJohn SepkoskiAtmospheric modeling performed todetermine the affects of such an im¬pact have led to the controversial “nu¬clear winter” argument, other impli¬ cations of the study opened the wholeproblem of extraterrestial affects onthe earth. As Sepkoski says, “morepeople became aware of the number ofasteroids that cross the earth’sorbit”.While this is the most sensationalaspect of Sepkoski’s research, it is notthe only, or the most important. Sep-koski’s own interests in the field arenot confined to specific problems. Hehas always been more interested inlarge-scale patterns and the generaltheory. Although most paleontologistsseem to concentrate upon specific an¬imals at specific times, Sepkoskiprefers to study the history of life onearth as a whole. As a graduate studyat Harvard, Sepkoski remembers thathe “tried working on several specificproblems in that way, but couldn’t un¬derstand them because there wasn’tenough general theory.” There is a cer¬tain amount of specialization neces¬sary, however, in that Sepkoski refersto himself as an invertabrate paleonto¬logist.Along with the more gereral and con¬tinuing study of extinctions, and evolu¬tion, (amongst other things), Sepkoskienjoys his teaching. His favoritecourse is Introductory Paleontology,taught Winter quarter to undergradu¬ates. He echoes other professors oncampus in preferring it to his graduatecourse. He finds more enthusiasm andfresher questions in the younger stu¬dents. But he also enjoys taking labora¬tories at the Field Museum. He enjoystraveling which makes the field work,and class trips over break to placeslike the Rocky Mountains even morefun. And although he finds is researchexciting, (his enthusaism is obvious tointerviewer and student alike), hecounters the sedentary work of the aca¬demic with physical hobbies such asworking with wood He also edits thejournal Paleobiology.February 28, 1984HE WASFIGHTINGFOR HIS LIFETHE MINUTEHE WASBORN.He was born too small, toosoon.Premature birth is theleading cause of newbornillness and death in theU.S. Some 250,000 babiesare born prematurely eachyear. The March of Dimesis working to preventprematurity and otherhealth threats to babiesbefore and after birth.The March of Dimessaves babies. 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X55*ORE-IDAFRENCH FRIESMINUTEMAIDBLUE BONNETMARGARINETEXSUNPINKGRAPEFRUITJUICE fiQ*46 oz. \J J4/$1GREEN ONIONSCELL0 ...CARROTS OOF1 lb. 39ROMAINELETTUCE 4Q*lbRED DELICIOUS , .APPLES OQtlb.CRISCOOIL32 oz. 39$179CHEESE OF THE WEEKBLUEib. $099KRAFTGRAPE JELLYDANNONY.E.S.YOGURT6 oz.REDRADISHESCHARMINBATHROOMTISSUE4 ROLL PACKNINE LIVESCAT FOODPROGRESSOCHICKENNOODLE orMINESTRONESOUPDUTCHLAUNDRYDETERGENT65 oz. 792/79*3/$199*3/$19999FINER FOODSSERVING63td PRAIRIE SHORLSEMBARK PLATA viknunWhe'f Voi A• t L S'tHhtf Ek’ 0n„»-The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28. 1984 7admissions and the recruiting gameBy Rosemary BlinnHave you ever wondered how theadmissions office chose you out oftheir 4400 applicants? Most studentsknow all too well the general processof submitting an application, maybehaving an interview, and then waitingto be accepted or rejected by acommittee. However, the U of CCollege and Graduate admissionsoffices are approaching theever-shrinking national applicant poolwith so far successful yet subtlerrecruiting policies for attractingstudents than most colleges anduniversities.One reason applications to Chicagohaven’t dropped with this nationaltrend is that there is a constantnumber of students who see the U of Cas their ideal school, according to TedO’Neill, associate director of Collegeadmissions.“One possible understanding of U ofC admissions is that we have a moreor less natural constituency, and it’s asmall constituency of very goodstudents,’’ O’Neill explained. “Thefeeling is that we’ll find thatconstituency and they’ll find us giventhe hard work we’re doing already,and that a lot more visiting and a lotmore recruiting probably won’tchange the nature of our pool.”How valid is the “self-selection”process that this constituency goesthrough when applying and decidingto come to the U of C? The admissionsjoffice stresses its existence and evenpoints to it as a problem. Zina Jacque,associate director of Collegeadmissions, explains, “One thing westruggle with is .... students who I seein the field who say ‘Oh, I’m just notgood enough with a B+ average and1250 boards.’ There’s this image thatone must be a genius (to get into theU of C) and the farther away you getfrom Chicago, the more likely you areto find this.”Dan Hall, dean of Collegeadmissions believes that this“self-selection” process continueseven to the type of students who wantto find out about the U of C. Heobserved, “We believe that studentswho look at Chicago will readmaterial, and that’s a concept that alot of places don’t have...that’s a realassumption about 17-year-old kids. Astudent who is interested in Chicago isprobably the type who will look ratherthoroughly into it.”“My impression is that one of thereasons that we won’t have largenumbers of applications is that we askfor a commitment almost from thebeginning,” Hall said of Chicago’sdistinctive, liberal arts education.At present, over 75 percent of thosewho apply to the U of C are admitted.This prompts a well-known collegehandbook, The Insider’s Guide toColleges to write that the U of C is theonly school in the country where 79percent of the applicants are acceptedand yet the SATs are still over 600. Infact, the even median for applicantsto the College is over 600.While it is clear from these testscores that many of the country’s topstudents are applying to the U of C,only 50 percent of the students whoare accepted then matriculate. This isone problem the admissions office hasbeen trying to overcome becausedespite the College’s rank as one ofthe top seven schools in the country,they still have to accept twice asmany students as are needed in thefreshman class.One reason that Jacque gives forthis high rate of rejection is thecaliber of the applicants, “People whochoose to apply here really do have alot of options, and though we are firstchoice this year more often than I’veseen in my previous two years, moststudents still are going to be admittedto lots of places.”One method of recruiting studentswidely used by the admissions officeis mailing information to students whoperformed well on the PSATs and tostudents in rural areas identified bythe Small School Talent Search.Admissions buys names for bothprograms from the EducationalTesting Service (ETS). Ted O’Neillestimates that mail is sent to 40,000 students through the PS AT list alone.Another way admissions attractsstudents is by traveling to highschools to hold informational andactual interviewing sessions. Themembers of the admissions office areeach responsible for visiting a certaingeographical area. In total, the officevisits about 400 schools, both publicand private.photo by kc morrisDan HallTed O’Neill sees this traveling asechoing the admissions office’s otherlow-key tactics. Instead of pressuringstudents to apply and then attend theU of C, O’Neill explained, “A lot ofwhat I do is to exchange informationwith students who already want tocome.”To convince the country’s topstudents to apply, the ones who canconceivably go to any school theywant, O’Neill commented, “If thestudents are good enough, yourconversation usually goes well enoughso that they’re persuaded, if you’redoing it right, that this is the kind ofplace they’d like to be. That’s the kindof persuasion you want, rather thanlaying out Chicago’s virtues.”In contrast to schools that mightpromise anything to win over studentsin an interview, O’Neill believes inletting Chicago speak for itself. “Thepremise is that they’re beinginterviewed as part of the admissionsprocess, not that they’re going to begiven a sales pitch in the course of atalk in which you’re supposed to betalking about them and theirinterests, not your own, O’Neill said,adding, “We’re not a school thatpromises to please everyone likeBrown or Stanford. We just won’tmake everyone happy and we knowthat.”When he interviews applicants,O’Neill tries to decide whether theywould be happy at the U of C. Helooks for their motivation in applyingsince, in his opinion, someone whowants to go to a name school to get a “good” degree and get a good jobwould not be happy in Chicago’s veryacademic environment.April Weekends are one lastrecruiting push which is not low-keyin that, O’Neill said, “As far as we’reconcerned, it’s purely recruiting.Those are the students we’veaccepted. By then we want them.We’ve made our decision.”It may appear that the Collegeadmissions adopts a take-it-or-leave-ilstance, but according to O’Neill theyare more concerned that prospies seewhat life at the U of C is really like.Student hosts play a large role in thatinformation process, as he observed,“We know our students are goingsometimes to tell them (prospies) thepainful truth. We know they (ourstudents) don’t hold back, and it stillworks beautifully.”One reason that students feel likethere is not much recruiting that goeson to attract students is the lack oftop ten, Division I athletics. The U ofC competes athletically in Division IIwhich forbids the distribution ofathletic scholarships. Therefore, whileour coaches do some scouting, theycannot “buy” atheletes as otherschools do.For some students particularlythose who are not clear admits, itoften becomes a question of can theydo the work and what will they add tothe incoming class. At present, the Uof C is still trying to attract morewomen to make the male/femaleratio, which is 68/32, more equal. Zin,Jacque explained that, “If you’ve gota women student who has a checkeredbackground but has really started togrow and be active, she would beinteresting to the Admissioncommittee...that same personage in imale might be questioned morerigorously.”Racial minority recruiting is alsoactive at the U of C. It is focused onthe Chicagoland area because, Jacqu"said, “My belief is that you operatefrom a base of strength, sort of makesure home is in the proper perspectivbefore heading out.”Minority recruiting is doneprimarily by one admissions officer,Andre Phillips, who specifically readand assesses all minorityapplications. The admissions officesalso buys names from ETS for theirmailing list of black and hispanic hignschool students who score well ontheir PSAT’s.The fact that Phillips is designatedto pay special attention to minorityapplications, as well as the fact thateach member of the admissions offic „is responsible for recruiting from onearea of the country, goes along withthe personal attention to eachapplicant that Jacque approves of,“The model admissions office, that Imost approve of and like that, is onethat allows a student, regardless ofcolor, to be able to follow through theentire admissions process with oneadmissions counselor.”Ted O’Neill explains the difficulty admissions has in convincingwell-qualified minorities to come tothe U of C by saying, “All the reasonsthat we have a third as manyapplications that some Ivy Leagueschools have affect our minorityrecruitment. We’re not well known tothe general public and we’re innercity.”In terms of financial aid eitherattracting or dissuading students fromapplying or coming to the U of C, theCollege officially says it will notconsider financial need in reviewingapplications and the schoolguarantees that it will fill 100 percentof what it calculates a student’sfinancial need to be. This is the samepolicy that Yale and other top schoolshave, but several schools have had todrop “aid-blind” admissions becauseit has proven too costly.Regarding reduction of a student’sfinancial aid once he or she is at the Uof C, Ted O’Neill said that the Officeof College Aid assumes that theamount of money a student is capableof making through jobs increases, andoften financial aid is lowered as aparent earns more money, but he saidthese are the only two reasons thatfinancial aid would be reduced.While the College does give out theCollege Honor Scholarships and otherawards, th admissions office does notencourage certain students to applyfor them, other than to informapplicants that they exist. “Thecompetition is too fierce to pickanyone as a likely winner,” O’Neillsaid of the possibility of thesescholarships being used to attract thebest students.The admissions office is presentlytrying to attract a more diverse classbut Zina Jacque cautions that this willnever be pushed for as much as it isat other schools, “I think Chicago hasbeen, and should remain, a placewhere someone can come and sort ofbe involved with one thing and not bemade to feel less than equal.”Chicago’s somewhat stodgy imageas a school for people who concernthemselves only with academics isone that the admissions office isworking to overcome. Jacque said ofthe school’s previous fostering of thisimage, “Chicago chose to say that weeducate broadly but we educate welland we’re not concerned with some ofthe frills. That’s not the reality ofpresent day but when rumor hath itthat you had a president who said,‘when you have the urge to exercise,lie down and it will pass,’ these kindsof things permeate everything andbecome the perception (of theschool).”This doesn’t mean that academicswill suffer though, it any move todiversity is made. Dan Hall clarifiedthe admissions office’s plan for thefuture saying, ’T think what we reallybelieve is that we’re the best schoolacademically in the country, that youcan’t find a better undergraduateeducation. A lot of the stuff that we’retrying to overcome is that that’s allthat goes on here.”Tom Raleigh:An Irishman with a love of lifeBy Leslie BiermanIf you frequent the “C” Shoparound noon you might have noticed agaggle of students listening intently tothe stories of an older man with redhair, blue eyes, and an Irish brogue.That man is Tom Raleigh, a man whohas led a full life and enjoys tellingothers in a witty and cheerful mannerabout his experience and reflections.Raleigh was born in Ireland and isa direct descendant of Sir WalterRaleigh. If you ask him how old he is,he’ll tell you he won’t say because“he’s old enough to know better.” Hemoved to New York City when he was14 and later attended St. FrancisSeminary in Brooklyn for a couple ofyears before deciding to give it up. Hefound his career when serving withthe US Martime Service duringWWII. Raleigh sailed the NorthAtlantic many times, and says thatthe experience did something to him;he didn’t want to leave the sea. Heliked the company of good men andthe travel. And travel he did, for years as anavigator in the Martime beforesettling down in Chicago. He’s seenEurope, South America...he calls itthe travel bug. He’s still traveling inthe summers, visiting the southwestUS and Ireland.One of Raleigh’s fondest memoriesis of a trip to Ireland, to the town heleft before coming to the US. He wentback to the schoolhouse where he wastaught as a child and sat at his olddesk, which brought him a certain“nostalgic pleasure.” He hastens toadd that it’s the simple things in lifethat bring him the most happiness.Raleigh has cultivated interests inAmerican literature, painting, andwriting throughout his lifetime. He’sread most of Mark Twain’s works andhas visited Twain’s hometome. Heloves to paint street scenes of Parisand London, drawing on memories ofhis visits there, and also seascapes, ofcourse. He’s an avid letter writer,writes two to three a day, and speakswith envy of authors he’s seen interviewed on TV. He hopes somedayto write about his own life.Raleigh has lived on 69th St. since1974. Around that time he got muggedand was badly beaten up. Ever sincehe’s had a problem with one of hisears. He wears a hearing aid now anddoesn’t go out after dark but stillmanages to walk six and a half milesdaily. He stops at the “C” shophalfway through the walk for coffeeand good conversation.Raleigh is still a bachelor. Hedescribes his experiences on boardship, all the marriages he saw breakup, and says, “That just wasn’t forme. A wife needs a husband andchildren need two parents.” Given hislove of the sea, he says he wan’t cutout for marriage.Raleigh says that he’s inclined toremember only the good times in hislife. Deep lines worn into his facefrom smiling, his quick wit, and theunmistakable twinkle of his eyes area reminder of those times.8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984Coatsworth initiates Mexican university exchangeBy Philip GlistMonths of planning and negotiationby Professor John Coatsworth and theU of C’s Center for Latin AmericanStudies with the National Universityof Mexico in Mexico City, havesuccessfully created an opportunityfor the U of C to initiate an exchangeprogram without precedent at anyother American university. Theproposed program is the first attemptby the U of C to exchange students,and eventually faculty, in a directrelationship with a foreign university.The U of C has previously offeredonly two opportunities for studyabroad, both in programs arrangedby other American universities.Coatsworth’s efforts may nowproduce the only existing exchangebetween any Mexican and Americanuniversities.The exchange with UN AM(Universidad Nacional Autonoma deMexico) is open to graduate studentsand undergraduates in any discipline,who have as little as one year ofSpanish language instruction.Participants receive a full year of Uof C academic credit, and lose none ofthe advantages of full-time studentstatus, such as health insurance andfinancial aid. Thanks to a somewhatelaborate payment scheme designedto benefit both the U of C andMexican students involved, accordingto Dean Herman Sinaiko,participation in the year of study *abroad may cost the U of C studentsfrom $3000 to $4000 less in totalBy Rosemary BlinnJe veux et j’exige d’exquisesexcuses. (I want and I demandexquisite excuses.)Eric Chartier presented this Frenchtongue twister as part of his move toincrease the value of well-articulatedFrench and spoken literary texts.When Chartier performed oncampus Wednesday and Thursday, hecommented that, “These exercises(tongue twisters) if practised dailywill increase the precision, clarity andefficacity of the muscles, the jaws,the lips, the tongue...It gives apresence to what you say. It would bevain to think extremely profoundthings if you presented them in aformless manner.’’Chartier worked with members ofLes Beaux Parleurs Wednesday night,having them act out poems andshowing students that texts take on adifferent meaning when they arespoken rather than read. Thursdaynight he acted out poems, shortstories and excerpts from Proust in aChicago exclusive appearance. About500 first- and second-year Frenchstudents and members of the campusand Hyde Park French communityattended.While he usually covers the pastfive centuries of French literature inhis presentation, Chartier said he doesnot attempt to make a historical orliterary connection between them. Hechooses his selections based on whatlends itself to theatrical interpretationand personal preference.He insisted on this timeless qualityof his presentation, saying of thetheme of stronger over weakerconfrontatation in La Fontaine poetryacted out Wednesday, “One can put itin any situation that engenders arelationship of force, be it at the courtof Louis XIV, be it between a bankmanager and employee, be it betweenthe rich and the poor...before placingthe sketch in a particular social class,one must respect the fundamentalrhyme of the text.”In looking at literary texts, Chartierclaims to see the rhyme and naturalpauses of the writer. He considersthese more than punctuation when heprepares his presentation.Chartier began giving thesepresentations four years ago when hesaw that students were searching formore meaning in texts than literaryanalysis could give them. He iscurrently making 36 presentations ina four-month trip across the US andCanada. He performs in French to expenses than would thecorresponding year here.According to Sinaiko, the financialarrangements are as follows: “Astudent will pay U of C tuition here.In addition to this U of C tuition, he orshe will pay a surcharge, probably inthe order of $2000 or $3000. Then theywill go to Mexico and they will get amonthly stipend which will total morethan the surcharge they paid here.That stipend will be used to pay forliving expenses.” Coatsworthelaborates, “Because of thedevaluation of the peso, and becauseof the corresponding low level ofprices, a stipend in what would seemlike a low figure in American dollarsactually would allow a student to livequite well. For a student who mightwant to live with a family forinstance, the cost of a single room,with kitchen privileges, runs about$100 a month. A double room wouldcost about $70. The price of food, likein many third world countries, isfixed at prices which reflect thepublic subsidy, so the price of food isvery low”.There are tremendous academicand cultural benefits to the UNAMexchange, making it more than just afinancially attractive option. Toillustrate the strengths of such UNAMdepartments as political science andsociology, Coatsworth points out thatgreater than half of the presidents ofMexico in the past 50 years havegraduated from the NationalUniversity. Also described as veryboth English-speaking and Europeancountries.In the other eight months of theyear, Chartier researches newmaterial, memorizes the texts, andoversees a troupe of actors in Pariswhich performs a play he wrote on agrant from the French fruit andvegetable growers on ecology, fruitsand vegetables. Chartier was an actorbefore he began his present work andstarred in several plays by FernandoArrabal, a Spanish playwright wholives in France.PHOTO BY ARTHUR U ELLISEric ChartierAlthough his Thursday programwas entirely in French and wasdifficult for even native speakers tofollow at points, Gerald Honigsblum,dean of extension division, said theperformance’s value for U of Cfirst-year French students was that ofinspiration. Honigblum observed, strong are archaeology, anthropology,and history. In the humanities,Coatsworth praises their literaturedepartment, singling out the areas ofLatin-American and Spanishliterature. UNAM’s separate programin art history, and their professionalschools, especially in architecture,and also believed by Coatsworth to beof very high quality.The National University of Mexico’scentral campus is on the outskirts ofMexico City and accommodates over100,000 students. Sinaiko believesUNAM has undergone substantial,positive change since about the timeof the 1968 Olympics. “It was atypical Latin American university inthe sense that the great majority ofthe faculty were only adjunctprofessors; mostly professionals —doctors, lawyers, businessmen — whoworked, and taught only part time atthe university. Since then they havetransformed the university, and itnow very heavily comprised of fulltime academics. It is much more likean American or European university,and has a much more stronglyacademic flavor to it than it had 15-20years ago.” Physically, Sinaikodescribed the Mexico City campus,with its huge meals and mosaics byRivera, as very beautiful, “one of thegreat modern art projects by thetwentieth century”.Another advantage for U of Cstudents participating in the UNAMexchange is the option of intensivelanguage instruction in Mexico City,“The students tell me that after 15 or20 minutes they were able to give upwhatever fantasies they might havehad in terms of ‘Am I going to geteverything here,’ and so they werekind of lulled into enjoying the soundof the French language in all of itspotential of communicative powers:its musicality, its rhythm, itsmovement.”“Here we are in an environmentwhere a text to a student at theUniversity of Chicago is almost asacred thing,” Honigsblum continued,“We read it with tremendous care andwe pour our hearts into its analysisand we forget that it has a musicalquality that could enhance itsanalysis.”In the same way that the textsChartier presented were studied inclass by first-year French students,next quarter music will be part oftheir curriculum in preparation for aperformance of French jazz andpopular music by the group,Emballage Perdu. Honigsblumcommented, “I think it’s importantthat we not bring someone on campuswho addresses himself or herselfstrictly to the well-initiated literati.”Chartier takes a pragmaticapproach to the presentation of textsin that he believes they can bepresented in different wavs (such asin the force confrontation) as long asthe audience still receives the text’sspecial spoken element.He has found many timid studentsin his travels who fear trying to speaka different language and who areafraid to “make poetry and literaturelive”. However, he sees this as aproblem for everyone as he stressed.“It is very important for all peoplewho have to communicateinformation, whether it be ajournalist, an actor, a politician; theynow have the obligation to have goodarticulation in whatever languagethey speak.”While Chartier is somewhat knownin France for his performances andhis approach, he discussed thedifficulty for artists to ‘make a living’in France. It is as difficult, if notharder than it is for artists in theUnited States, according toHonigsblum who said, “It’s a verydifficult life. The notion that one hasthat European governments supportthe arts in a much more direct andgenerous way is a very (exaggeratedone). I’m not saving thev don’tsupport them, but it’s not what it’smade out to be.” in July and August before classesbegin. This preparation is expected toallow students with one or two yearsof Spanish language instruction to beready in the fall to enter a classroomsituation. Sinaiko expects this extrainstruction will cost no more than$200, and the stipend will furnish thestudent with living expenses duringthis period also. There is alsoavailable an orientation officeproviding advice about such concernsas housing, which courses to take,and who are the university’s bestprofessors.UNAM authorities were veryenthusiastic about the prospect of theexchange with the U of C for certainof their own reasons. According toCoatsworth, the devaluation of thepeso made “ordinary exchangeagreements with UNAM .mpossiblebecause they are based jn the notionthat students from Mexico pay theirway in dollars in the states, and thestudents from the Americanuniversity pay their way in pesoswhen they get to Mexico. The scarcityof dollars as a result of the financialcrisis and the devaluation made itimpossible for UNAM to think aboutan exchange program with anAmerican university and they evencut back on existing programs withother institutions. The number ofgraduate study fellowships forMexican students has been cutdrastically in the last couple ofyears.”The approach that UNAM and U ofC will use to circumvent thisdifficulty make this proposedprogram, according to Coatsworth,“the first agreement between a NorthAmerican university and a Mexicanuniversity that makes it possible forMexican students to study in thiscountry without incurring doilar coststo the sponsoring Mexicaninstitution.” Sinaiko elaborates, “thesurcharge that our students pay herewill go into a special fund to be usedto support the Mexican students whocome here. We will pay their studentsout of our funds, and they will pay ourstudents out of their funds. There willbe no exchange of funds. The amountof money that we spend on theirstudents will be equivalent to theamount that they spend on ourstudents. It’s a very nice principle.All we do is calculate the cost andthen say ‘if you send us fiveundergraduates, we’ll send you twograduates.’ We will calculate theamounts each year, and work out thenumbers based on exchange rates.”Sinaiko expects that this approachwill accommodate as many qualifiedstudents as are interested in going.The proposed UNAM-U of Cexchange appears to offer a uniqueopportunity for cultural exchangebenefitting each country. Sinaikofounds his optimism for theprogram’s success on his perceptionof UNAM as “a very large, very vitalnational university, at a time in whichthe whole intellectual climate of LatinAmerica is shifting powerfully.Mexico is a region of relative stabilitywhich has attracted intellectuals fromall over the Latin American world. AsI understand it, the NationalUniversity has become a majorintellectual center through asdifferent from the University ofChicago as it is possible to be.”Coatsworth believes that if thisprogram succeeds, it may become amodel that the National Universitymight attempt to use with otherAmerican universities. In these timesof economic difficulity in Mexico suchprograms could be of tremendousvalue to their educational system. Inthe long term, Coatsworth feels suchprograms, using the U of C’s effortsas a blueprint, “could have asignificant impact on improvingcultural relations between the UnitedStates and Mexico.”There will be a meeting for studentsinterested in the program Feb. 28 at 4p.m. in Harper 284. For furtherinformation, contact Peter Goldsmith,Foreign Studies Advisor, Harper 272(962-3419) no later than March 30.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984—9Presenting Parleurs poems and profundity§! NEWSamong its mcontinued from page onethat their next step would be to wait forthe opinion of Arthur Sussman, vicepresident of the University’s GeneralCounsel. Possible future plans includegoing to the Board of Trustees. The As¬sembly will also propose its resolutionto the Council of the Senate. BertramCohler, the William Rainey Harperprofessor of Social Sciences in the Col¬lege, has already expressed a willing¬ness to introduce the resolution to theCouncil.About their prospects, Kittredgesaid, “We believe that as long as thefaculty saw no major problem, theywould feel sympathetic.”Concerning the Assembly’s condem¬nation of the 21st Precinct’s policies,Chris Hill, SG Secretary, complainedthat the 21st Precinct does not recog¬nize the Maroon as a newspaper. Hesaid, “we want the Maroon to get ev¬erything that the Herald gets.” Specif¬ically, Hill referred to the Hyde ParkMendelsoncontinued from page oneman, Mercedes Mallette, politicaloperation director for Mayor HaroldWashington’s Political Education Proj¬ect, and Monica Faith Stewart, aformer state representative.“The emphasis is for a rainbow coali¬tion,” Mendelson said, noting thatprominent Hispanics such as Juan Ve¬lasquez and Jesus Garcia belong to IVI,in addition to members of the Heart ofUptown Coalition, which works for poorwhites in that area.Mendelson sees roles for Braun andNewhouse in black-white independentunity.He noted Braun recently returned toIVI after letting her membership lapsefor a few years, and Newhouse recentlyspoke before Independent workers inpromoting the delegate slate pledged toWashington’s favorite son slate. Suchefforts, Mendelson believes, will keepblack and white independents unitedfor common goals. and sharing informationmembers.Tricia Vidal, chairman of the SG In¬tercollegiate Affairs Committee, de¬fended the position that SG should be¬come a member. She argued that theUniversity of Chicago would receiveaccess to a computer link-up tomember institutions that would consi¬derably speed up communications.There may even be a chance that theUniversity would be given a computerfor that purpose, according to Vidal.She said that AAUS is currently fin¬ishing a significant research study ofthe policies of member institutionsfrom across the country. As the Uni¬versity is a member of AAUS for thisacademic year, she said that she mightreceive the results of the study within aweek.In fact, the University’s role withAAUS within the past few years hasbeen substantial. Last year the Univer¬sity served as the host for the nationalAAUS Conference, and President Graywas asked and agreed to become amember of the AAUS’s Board of Advi¬sors.However, Rick Szesny, Chairman ofthe Finance Committee, said that lastyear’s meeting here was ineffective Herald’s access to the “police blot¬ter.”Suggesting that very few Universitystudents know that the Herald evenexists, Hill felt that the Maroon needsto have similar access, for “it is of keyimportance that the students know thisinformation.”Hill criticized the University admin¬istration: “They have not been particu¬larly cooperative on the issue.” Theresolution states that SG would never¬theless continue to seek support fromthe administration to reverse the poli¬cy.The resolution also says that SGshould direct its Executive Council toseek reversal of the policy “at alllevels of the government of the city ofChicago, as well as through the Chica¬go news media.”The discussion ended with a positivevote by acclamation for the proposal.Most of the remainder of the meetingwas spent discussing the possible ad¬vantages and disadvantages of joiningAAUS. AAUS is an organization of stu¬dent governments from about 50member schools. It was created fiveyears ago to stimulate and facilitatestudents’ role in improving the “statusquo” by increasing communication with only one half of the students ex¬pected attending and only 70 percent ofthe planned programs actually occur¬ring. Hill said that Gray’s decision tobecome a Board Adviser was madewithout asking Student Governmentmembers.On AAUS, Szesny said, “I have verybad feelings about AAUS. I don’t thinkthe University of Chicago got much outof it or is getting much out of it thisyear.” Later he asked, “What do weget from AAUS that we cannot getfrom the University?”A strong majority of the Assemblyappeared to agree that SG should notpay $175 to join the organization. Butthey did vote to establish a selectionprocess for the purpose of sending sixmembers of SG to this year’s nationalconference in North Carolina.Commenting on the decision againstbecoming a member of AAUS, Vidalsaid, “We will be losing out on a lot ofinformation as we do not belong to anystudent organization, whether state ornational.” She attributed the negativevote to the other members’ lack of in¬volvement with AAUS.The next SG Assembly meeting willbe March 29.Hayescontinued from page 5change things. Otherwise we are going to have, apermanent...permanent sizeable number of people,twenty years from the day, who never had a job if wedon’t change the situation. I just heard the other dayabout Ford, who is going to close a plant in order toremodel. They are going to build a new kind of carand stuff. But they also said that they would haveless people than they do right now. They are going toinstall some robots and this is what is going to hap¬pen. Look at the tremendous profit General Motorsand Ford made; $3.3 billion for General Motors, andFord $1.2 billion, with less people. And with techno¬logical changes, they have no need for the people. Sowhere do people go? I think the Congressional BlackCaucus really has to look at this problem. And I thinkwe have to expose this big lie that Reagan keeps tell¬ ing, that things are getting better. They aren’freallygetting better. For a person who is out of a job andcan’t find a job, they are already in the throes of thedepression. What are you going to tell them? Thatinflation is down and it’s looking up? You have lots ofpeople in that category, who are looking for someoneto speak up for them, and I see a coalition at leastforming around the CBC.DS: So you see a popular based movement turningthings around?CH: That’s right.DS: Now that you have spent some time in Con¬gress, do you think we can work within the system tobring about the necessary social changes?CH: I think so. But you have to get the systempointed in the right direction and that is going to be atough, tough thing to do. After all, we live in the freeenterprise system that emphasizes profits, not peo¬ple. And we have to change that and put the empha¬sis on people’s lives.DS: People no profits?CH: That’s right, that’s right.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOUnited WayCrusade of MercyPLEASE GIVE10—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28. 1984Geneticistwins $120gDr. Janet Rowley, a University ofChicago genetics specialist renownedfor her work on the relationship be¬tween genes and cancer, has won thefirst Hussain Makki A1 Juma Interna¬tional Cancer Prize, awarded by thegovernment of Kuwait and the Interna¬tional Union Against Cancer. The prizecarries an award of $120,000.The prize was announced jointlyFeb. 22 in Kuwait and Geneva, Switzer¬land, where the IUAC is based. Theaward is funded by the Kuwait Founda¬tion for the Advancement of Sciences.Rowley is Professor in the Depart¬ment of Medicine at the University andDirector of the Hematology/OncologyCytogenetics Laboratory at the Uni¬versity Medical Center. She receivedthe award for “the most outstandingscientific achievement in cancer re¬search — in the basic science or clini¬cal field — as identified by scientificpublications over the last four years.”Rowley’s research has focused on de¬termining the particular chromosomechanges that occur in human leukemiacells and relating certain recurringpatterns of change to the type of leuke¬mia, to the response to therapy and,more recently, to the prior exposure ofpatients to mutagenic agents.In 1973, Rowley was the first re¬searcher to discover a chromsometranslocation — an abnormality inwhich a piece of one chromosome hasbroken off and attached itself to an-Students urgedBy Hilary TillThe University’s ComputationCenter is encouraging all students whothink they may use computers in theirfuture classes to obtain a Person-IDnow. Obtaining a Person-ID now willsave paperwork in the future and en¬able a student to choose their own mne¬monic (easily remembered) Person-ID.For the uninitiated, a Person-ID is a“unique four-character string (which)will be associated with the (computer)user throughout his or her associationwith the University,” states a Compu- Janet Rowleyother — associated with a particularform of leukemia.Since then, she and her research col¬leagues have been responsible for con¬siderable investigative work in thisarea, identifying four other such trans¬locations or related genetic abnormali¬ties associated with different types ofleukemia.“Dr. Rowley, through years of in¬sightful research, has become one ofthe nation’s leading experts on thecomplex world of cancer and gene¬tics,” said Dr. Donald W. King, VicePresident for the Medical Center andDean of the Division of the BiologicalSciences and The Pritzker School ofMedicine.“Her laboratory has been at the fore¬front of research providing supportingevidence for the view that chromosomechanges are a fundamental part of thedevelopment of human cancers,” hesaid.o get Person IDstation Center pamphlet. A person musthave a Person-ID before one can usethe Computatation Center’s com¬puters.If a student enrolls in a class usingcomputers and does not already have aPerson-ID, one will be generated forthe student by a Computation Centercomputer program. This ID will not be“as nice” as one that a person couldchoose for him or herself, as HalBloom, Applications Systems Managerfor the Computation Center, put it.(For example, my Person-ID, which Ichose for myself last fall, is TILL. Onegenerated by the computer programwould be something like KXLQ, whichwould have very little mnemonic con¬tent.)If a student is registered in a com¬puter-related course spring quarterand “wishes to choose his or her Per¬son-ID, he or she must obtain the Per¬son-ID prior to the end of this quarter,”informed Bloom. To obtain a Person-ID, a person should bring photo identi¬fication to the Computation Center’sBusiness Office at USITE between9-12:30 or 1-4 on weekdays.If a student does not have a Person-ID by the end of this quarter and is reg¬istered in a spring quarter class whichmakes use of computers, the computergenerated Person-ID may be picked upfrom the USITE Business Office start¬ing the second day of spring quarter.YOUR 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.- Battarims - Film9 - Darkroom accessories - Vldao tapas- Cassatta tapas - Chamlcals- RadiosThe University of Chicago BookstorePhotographic & Office Machine Department970 E. 58th St. 2nd Floor962-7558I.B.X. 5-4364 U of C tests cosmic rays“The Chicago Egg,” the largest cos¬mic ray detector ever built for spaceflight, left is laboratory home Feb. 20for Cape Canaveral, Florida, begin¬ning the first part of a four-million-mile voyage to analyze the most ener¬getic sub-atomic particles known.The U of C experiment — sealed in¬side its 10 by 12-foot egg-shaped alumi¬num shell — will be launched intospace in March of next year to mea¬sure the speeding atomic nuclei knownas cosmic rays.Using a new type of detector devel¬oped at the University over the last tenyears, the experiment will measure in¬dividual particles with higher energiesthan ever before studied. It is the 32ndU of C experiment built for space flightsince 1958 — and, at 5,000 pounds, byfar the largest.Cosmic rays are atoms that havebeen stripped of their electrons. Theyhurtle through the galaxy at nearly thespeed of light, careening along the ga¬laxy’s curving magnetic field lines likesub-atomic bobsled racers. Their ori¬gin is still uncertain, but astrophysi¬cists believe they are launched on theirmulti-million year voyages by the ex¬plosions of supernovae — massivestars that end their lives in catacyls-mic eruptions.Internat’l coin fairThe ninth annual Chicago Interna¬tional Coin Fair will be held March 16through 18 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel.Admission is free, and hours are Fri¬day and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.,and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.Over 100 rare coin dealers from theUS and 10 foreign countries will be onhand, and there will also be publicmeetings of seven collectors organiza¬tions and a rare coin auction. For moreinformation call 346-3443. “The elemental composition of cos¬mic rays is similar but not identical tothat of the Earth,” explained DietrichMueller, co-principal investigator forthe experiment and Associate Profes¬sor of Physics. “How and why do theydiffer?” We will try with this experi¬ment to answer that question forhigher-energy cosmic rays than havebeen measured before.”“What I find so satisfying,” saidMueller, “is that we are going into anew territory and will use an experi¬mental technique no one has used be¬fore. We are opening a new decade inenergy.”Free vision screeningThe Illinois College of Optometry willconduct free vision screenings for visi¬tors to the Museum of Science and In¬dustry March 5 through 10 in observa¬tion of “National Save Your Vision”week.Faculty members will supervise 150interns who will test both children andadults for color vision, depth percep¬tion, side vision, and glaucoma. It willalso include an evaluation of presentcorrective prescriptions and overalleye health and vision.Rock on ForumPhilip Rock, Illinois State SenatePresident and a candidate for the Dem¬ocratic nomination for the US Senate,will be on WHPK-FM’s (88.3) “SouthSide Forum” Thursday at 5:30 p.m.Craig Rosenbaum, news director forWHPK, moderates the show. DavidBrooks, politics editor for the ChicagoJournal and political columnist for theChicago River Clipper, and ChicagoMaroon news editor Cliff Grammichare the showT’s panelists.WITH “ALL THE TRIMMINGS”1/4 LB. ALL BEEFCHARBROILED HAMBURGERSHOT AAA CHARBROILEDDOGS POLISHFREE FRENCH FRIES W/S3.00 PURCHASE!FREE PINT OF MORRY’S ICE CREAM W/S6.00 PURCHASE!MORRY’S WHUTCHINSON commons99*99*Hunger is around the comer...Food donated during the holidays is nowgone. The Hyde Park Food Pantry is partof the Chicago-area network providingfood to people in local communities whowould otherwise go hungry, and nowneed your help.DONATE MARCH 7 & MARCH 8—SSA Lobby —Ida Noyes Checkdesk— Reynolds Club Lobby —Billings Hospital CafeteriaONLY 2 DAYS, SO DON’T FORGET. THEHUNGRY ARE DEPENDING ON YOUSponsored by SSA Student AssociationThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February’ 28. 1984—liTWomen’s b-ball reaches pre-season goalsBy Geoff SherryThe University of Chicago women’sbasketball team wrapped up its seasonlast week with a 57-45 win over BeloitCollege to finish the year with an im¬pressive 15-6 overall record, includinga 12-1 conference mark.It was a successful season indeed.After opening the season with lossesto Wheaton and Illinois Benedictine,the Maroons cruised to victory in 10 oftheir next 12 games. Included in thatstint was a seven-game winning streakwhich featured scores of 67-29 overGrinnell and 72-28 against Beloit. Theyalso took an emotional 68-67 victoryover St. Norbert. The Maroons laterposted a 71-23 victory over LawrenceUniversity, which proved to be thelargest margin of victory for theMaroons since Chicago destroyed Mun¬delein College 95-19 on Feb. 16, 1981. . After losing a heartbreaker to much-heralded Augustana, 70-68, he Maroonsswiped the next three games in antici¬pation of St. Norbert. The game withSt. Norbert not only would almost as¬suredly determine the conferencechampion, but also held the possibilityof an NCAA bid. The Maroons lost tothe Green Knights, though, after lead¬ing by as many as nine points duringthe first half. Chicago regrouped afterthe loss to finish off the season with twomore conference victories overLawrence and Beloit.The team set goals at the beginningof the season and achieved all of them.Free throw shooting, field goal per¬centage, and defense formed areaswhich head coach Diann Nestel and herteam hoped to excel in. The Maroonsfinished at least six percent above theirgoal for free throw shooting, met their mark of 40 percent shooting from thefield, and outscored the opposition, onthe average, 63-50 while boasting theconference’s best defense.Assistant coach Kevin McCarthycommented, “We had most things eva¬luated from the start of the season. Weknew we would do well if we played upto our potential.’’ Chicago finished witha record identical to last year’s with aroster having only two new faces. TheMaroons had lost only two players tograduation last year, but this year is acompletely different story — they losefive.Starting guards and graduating se¬niors Dana Howd and Beverly Daviswill be greatly missed on account oftheir ball control and defense. Howdwas the leader on the floor. She wouldpop consistently from 15 feet or dish offinside for the easy lay-in. Davis, the quickest player on the floor for theMaroons, was counted on to defensethe opposition’s toughest players, someof the 3-4 inches taller than herself.Helen Straus will also graduate thisyear and the absence of her overallversatility will be apparent. Nestelpraised her “concentration and readi¬ness to play coming off the bench”time and time again. Straus played apower forward position and intimidat¬ed opponents with her aggressive de¬fense and rebounding.Fourth-year players Karyn VanSteenlandt provided talent coming offthe bench along with leadership on andoff the court. “The leadership providedby players such as Carol and Karynwill be hard to replace,” added third-year player Wendy Pietrzak. Nesteland McCarthy will be looking for nextcontinued on page 13MAROON962-9555 COMING SOONTO HUTCH COMMONS...MORRY’SPIZZA & PASTAMOVIES 11 pmFeb. 28/29 The ProducersMarch 6/7 Joe JacksonConcertMarch 13/14 Tommy *NOW FEATURING:MOLSON GOLDEN ON TAP!ROCK VIDEOSEach Friday Night, 11:30 pm -1 amMembership required21 and overStudios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking Available jCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335% Student Discounts9:00 AM.-4:30 PM.Monday thru FridayIMAMON -Ir-—86295551 SPRING BREAK ’84.THE TRADITION LIVES ON!TAKE THE GREATERFORT LAUDERDALE BREAK.Hollywood, Pompano Beach, Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Deerfield Beach.Want the tradition to live on forever? Then order your full-color 17" x 23" poster of Spring Break ’84 by sending$3.00 (check or money-order, no cash, please) to: Spring Break ’84, 500 Third Avenue West, Seattle. WA 98119Be suie to include your name, address and college. Frice includes postage and handling.12—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984"Wrestlers Shin,Lietzan make All-AmericanTeam ranked 20th in nation in final pollsBy Don Haslam go (NY) State, who went on to win theJunior Karl Lietzan and sophomore national championship in the 190 lbGene Shin brought home All-American weight class.honors from the Division III NCAA Lietzan’s victory was probablyWrestling Championships Saturday, sweeter than Shin’s as he narrowly de- interesting end. With Gene losing 11-10and only several seconds remaining,he executed a legal takedown. The matjudge ruled that he had indeed scoredin time but the official overruled thecall, and claimed that time had runout. The opposing wrestler was fromTrenton (NJ) State, the college thatwon the number one slot in the tour¬ney.The Maroons’ fourth and sixth placefinishes were good enough to nab theteam 20th place in this year’s final Di¬vision III NCAA polls. Interestingly,conference rivals Cornell and Coe, theone-two finishers in the MCAC this fall,failed to finish in the top 20 even thoughthey took a total of six competitors toNew York. Each team took a singlefourth place.Shin and Lietzan both went to lastyear’s Division III championships, butmanaged only one win between them. This time they collected seven wins inearning the All-American titles, as thetop eight in each weight class qualifyfor All-American status.Coach Kocher had several commentsabout the performance and the futureof Chicago wrestling. He said that “notonly are they (Gene and Karl) both ta¬lented athletes, but both worked excep¬tionally hard to achieve their All-American status. The rest of the teamand I are very proud of them. Sincewe’ll be returning both of them nextyear, I anticipate the U of C will beranked in the top 20 in the pre-seasonpolls next year. And of course, we’ll belooking for the rest of the team to becontributing at the championships nextyear.’’Kocher also expressed thanks to hisassistance coach, Scott Ludford. Scottis a Lutheran Seminary student and agraduate of Augsburg College.Maroon All-Americantice sessionThe All-American status for UC wres¬tlers is the first under the five years ofcoach Leo Kocher’s tutelage, and Shinand Lietzan are the only such Maroonperformers in the last 20 years.Shin was seeded fourth going into thetourney (held at SUNY Binghamton)and that’s just how he finished. He gotto the semi-finals without being beaten,but there lost to Doug Morris of Oswe-sweats his way through a long prac- Fencers win two at homefeated the wrestler who beat himsoundly at the championships lastyear. This wrestler was Paul Ardrichof Rutgers, and Lietzan beat him 6-5 inthe consolation bracket after losing tothe eventual third place finisher in thefirst round. Ardrich has beaten Lietzan19-0 last year. Karl placed sixth in hisweight class.Shin’s loss in the semi-finals had anWhitewater too deep for MaroonsUC's Clark wins three events, thoughBy Frank LubyDominating most of the field events,the University of Wisconsin (Whi¬tewater) cruised to a 73-44 victory overthe University of Chicago women’strack team Tuesday at the FieldHouse.Whitewater took every point in thefield events except the long jump,where Chicago freshman RomneeClark captured first place — one of herthree firsts of the evening. Whi¬tewater’s Cathy Bukowski won boththe high jump and shot put.Clark shattered the school record inthe 300 meters with a run of 37.9, atenth of a second better than theformer record held by teammate Nata¬lie Williams, and also won the 60-yarddash in 7.6 seconds.“We had a lot of firsts, but we didn’thave the depth,” said Chicago coachLinda Whitehead, who noted that twoof the events had only two participants,and “if we had bodies to put in there wemay have gotten the points.” She alsosaid that Whitewater brought a squadtwice the size of Chicago’s.Williams had one of those firsts, asshe won the 400-meter run by fourtenths of a second over Whitewater’sDeb Zuleger. Freshman Myra LaVen-ue posted a 9.8 time in the 60-yard hurd¬les for first place, and Tracy Buttontook third. Button came back to win the1000, tough, with a time of 2:59.2.Basketballcontinued from page 12year’s seniors — Sheila Dugan, Pietr-zak, and Beth Lasky — to fill the largeleadership roles left vacant by gradua¬tion.Although most players participate inother sports during the off-season, thereal work will be done by Nestel andMcCarthy in the upcoming months.“This year has got to be a successfulrecruiting year. Coach will try to ob¬tain two big players and a couple ofguards,” said Pietrzak. According toMcCarthy, nothing has been finalizecyet, but what is certain is the difficultyinherent in replacing the five playerslost to graduation.McCarthy summed up the year bysaying “Anytime you finish with a 15-6record you have to be happy. The lossto Norbert was a little disappointing,but it was good just to be able to play inan important game.” Pietrzak echoedhis sentiments: “We had a great year.It was rough losing at the end, and itwas hard to play those last two games.It would have been easy just to give upagainst Lawrence and Beloit, but thisteam has a lot of pride...we wanted towin. ’ Williams usually runs the 60 and 300with Clark, ‘but we put Natalie in the400 to try to get more points,” said Whi¬tehead. “She’s the more experiencedrunner, so we gave her the longer dis¬tance.” Williams also had a third placein the 60 on Tuesday.Other Maroons who placed includeRachel Vinkey, with a second in the3000 and a third in the 1500, and SaraDell, who ran a personal best of 2:27.5to take second in the 800 meters.Lisa Peterson and Ingrid Buntschuhcame in second and third in the 600-yard run, and Sue Snow came in thirdin the 3000 meters.The Maroons round out the indoorseason next Friday when they host theMACW Championship meet at 7 p.m. atthe Field House. By Anthony CashmanLast Saturday the U of C fencingteam proved how much they have de¬veloped under head coach GraemeJennings. Chicago beat the Universityof Wisconsin-Parkside and the Univer¬sity of Michigan, while losing to North¬western.Most of Chicago’s top fencing oc¬curred against Northwestern despitetheir losing score. This was particular¬ly evident in the epee competition,where Northwestern won 6-3.The last three bouts of the strip wentla belle. That occurs when the epeebout is tied at four touches apiece. Thematch is then determined by one touch,and unfortunately for Chicago, North¬western captured two of the three labelle contests.Despite strong efforts, Brad Marinand Lee Shepard could not get theirwins in la belle competition. BrianSelby took his la belle in the final boutof the day.The two la belle losses decided thestrip. Epee captain Marin commented“It was a successful bout. We cametwo touches away from taking thestrip.”Northwestern’s epee captain OliverJohn also thought that the strip was asuccess for the Maroons. “They’refencing a whole lot better. They’ve im¬proved a lot with Jennings as a coach. The foil squad lost their strip toNorthwestern 2-7, while the sabre lost1-8.The foil team fared much betteragainst Parkside and Michigan. Foilbeat Parkside 8-1 and Michigan 6-3.Captain A1 Schultz remarked thatthese victories show the team’s actualstrength. “The teams we went againstwere more our level, more indicativeof our strength on the Division III level.When we go against schools with thesame amount of training, we win.”The sabre won their first two strips,beating Parkside 9-0 entirely on for¬feits and beating Michigan 7-2 on onlyseveral forfeits.Coach Jennings commented aboutthe matches. “We fenced a number ofteams that were weak, that didn’t havefull teams. Nevertheless, we improvedagainst Northwestern.”Jennings further remarked “There’sstill lots of room for improvement.With the experience gained this year,we should be able to do a lot better.They will feel more comfortable withthemselves which is a big part of fenc¬ing.”Jennings will continue to instruct atopen fencing sessions this spring.The U of C fencing team travels tothe Great Lakes regional fencing tour¬nament this weekend.Rourke shines in track team’s lossBy Shong ChowDespite the superlative efforts ofAaron Rourke, who won three events,the UC men’s track team was edged byW’isconsin-W’hitewater 73-58 in a dualmeet Tuesday night in the Field House.With victories over Valparaiso, NorthPark, Elmhurst, and Wheaton, andlosses to Wabash and Wisconsin-W'hi-tewater, the loss Tuesday closed thedual meet season for the Maroons witha 4-2 record. The indoor season endsSaturday with the conference champi¬onship meet.“We got slammed in the high jumpand outscored 16-2 in the long and triplejump,” said UC coach Ted Haydon,“and that’s where we probably lostit.”Outscored 36-13 over the final sixevents, the Maroons suffered from theabsence of Paul Song, due to illness, inthe 300 yd dash and the high jump. JeffKaiser experienced extraordinary badluck in the long jump, scratching inthree attempts and failing to score points in the event for the first time thisseason.The excitement of the event, tough,undoubtedly was provided by the vic¬tories in half-mile, mile, and two-mileevents by Aaron Rourke. Normallyonly entered in one event. Rourke wonall three events with little trouble,scoring 15 points individually for theteam. Rourke, who on the season haswon the 1000 yd run as well, establishedhimself as the team's foremost runnerwith Tuesday’s victories and a force tobe contended with in the upcoming con¬ference meet.Other good performances bymembers of the UC team includedDavid Raskin in the mile and Lap Chanin the 60-yard dash. Raskin, who hadconcentrated in previous meets only onthe two-mile run, ran a personal best of4:26 in the mile to finish two secondsbehind Rourke. Chan, who is only afreshmen, has become one of the big¬gest surprises for the team with hisemergence as not only a competitive long and triple jumper, but as asprinter as well. In his first attempt inthe sprints this year, Chan managed tofinish second in the 60-vard dash, theweakest event for the team all seasonlong.Despite the loss, coach Haydon re¬mained optimistic, pointing out that sixof sixteen members who scored pointswere freshmen. “With efforts likethose, we have something to look for¬ward to.” he said. As for the upcomingconference meet, Haydon indicatedthat if Song as well as hurdler KevinKalbfell can return from their injuriesthe teams fortunes should considerablyimprove.The UC track team closes out theirindoor track season with the MCAC(Midwest Conference Athletic Champi¬onships), Saturday at 11 a m. in theField House. Other than the Maroons,there should be ten other teams com¬peting including perennial championCoe College.Kinney makes swimming nationalsSenior Martha Kinney, captain of thewomen’s swim team, broke four Mid¬west Conference records Saturday inthe MACW swimming championshipsin Grinnell, Iowa, as the Maroons fin¬ished a “solid” fourth out of eightteams.“No one could touch her,” said headcoach A1 Pell. “She was outstanding.” Kinney qualified for the nationals, tooccur March 8, 9, and 10 in Atlanta,with record-setting victories in the 50and 100-yard freestyle. She also estab¬lished records in the 50 and 100-yardfly, and captured a second place finishas well, to give her the highest individ¬ual point total for any swimmer in themeet.Sports CalendarMen's Swimming — Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, at the Men's Confer¬ence Championships. “The level of individual effort wascertainly there,” said Pell about Kin¬ney. Kinney’s workout program thiswinter included two-a-day workouts inthe morning and afternoon, and weighttraining three times a week. Pell saidthat Kinney also “swam really wellover the summer” as she worked onsome 50 meter courses.As for the team overall, Pell said“we did extremely well as far as timesand positions go. the individual effortswere really enjoyable to watch.”A complete recap of the event willappear in Friday’s Maroon.The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, February 28, 1984-13CAMPUS FILMS W6SBBThe Big Heat (Fritz Lang, 1953) A keyfilm noir, with a great cast includingGlenn Ford, Gloria Grahame, LeeMarvin, and Alexander Scourby. Fordis an embittered ex-cop out to breakmob kingpin Scourby, with the aid ofGrahame, the gangster’s moll. Marvinlooms large as a sadistic killer; hisscene with Grahame and some veryhot coffee is an unforgettable momentof cinematic brutality, and just mayput you off your java for days. Tues.,Feb. 28 at 8 p.m. DOC. $2. — MKHamlet (Tony Richardson, 1969)Pretty much what you’d expect of aHamlet made in London in the late six¬ties — it’s long on youth and energy,short on tradition, finesse, and (due tocuts) text. Nicol Williamson gives anextraordinary performance as Ham¬let; his ironic, distinctly unpoetic read¬ing of his famous soliloquies are star¬tling and riveting. Also in the cast areMarianne Faithfull as Ophelia, andAnthony Hopkins, youthful and appeal¬ing as the smiling villain, Claudius.Wed., Feb. 29 at 8 p.m. DOC. $2.50-MKThe Navigator (Buster Keaton andDonald Crisp, 1924) Buster Keatonturned in one of his most endearingperformances as the deliriously im¬probable Rollo Treadway, a helplessmillionaire who desperately wants tomarry Kathryn McGuire. She, howev¬er, wants no part of him — his money,body, or position — until both spoiled,rich kids find themselves alone aboarda transatlatnic ocean liner withoutlights, power, or steam. Keaton’stheme, as always, is the little man atthe mercy of the Machine, and his sightgags — thanks, in part, to script-advi¬sor Clyde Bruckman (writer and co¬director of The General and Sherlock.Jr.) — rank among Keaton’s funniest.Wed., Feb. 29 at 8:30 p.m. LSF. $2-PFAparajito (Satyajit Ray, 1957) In thisthe second film in the famed Apu Trilo¬gy, Ray employs a documentary styleto depict the transition of Apu’s familyfrom village life to city life. Here, Apumust encounter the modern educationsystem and must bear the loss of hisparents. “The film chronicles the emergence of modern industrial India,showing it to be not a primitive societybut a corrupted society. However, Apuhimself embodies Ray’s belief that in¬dividuals need not become corrupt.’’ —Pauline Kael, 5001 Nights at the Mov¬ies. Thurs., Mar. 1 at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.International House. $2 —BTThe Black Book (Anthony Mann, 1949)So weird. This French Revolutionmelodrama is perhaps the strangestfilm of this quarter’s Mann series; os¬tensibly a period piece, The BlackBook is so infused with a noir sensibili¬ty that quite ofen only the eighteenth-century costumes are the only tip-offthat the action is not set in Los Angelesof the 1940’s. Robert Cummings is ananti-Terror agent trying to get hishands on Maximillien Robespierre’slittle black book, which contains infor¬mation that could topple his regime.Raging close-ups and sinister shadowsabount in this bizarre black comedy, inwhich Robespierre threateninglywarns one of his subordinates, “Don’tcall me Max!” Thurs., March 1 at 8p.m. DOC. $2. —MKBad Day at Black Rock (John Sturges,1954) Spencer Tracy’s last film forMetro was a top-notch melodramaticthriller about senselessness and after-math of wartime racial tensions. The“bad day” occurs in late 1945, when aone-armed stranger appears in thesweltering southwestern town of BadRock (appropriately filmed in DeathValley) to present a dead Japanese-American soldier’s medal to his father,only to discover — bit by bit — that thefather was brutally lynched and mur¬dered four years earlier. SpencerTracy stars as the strong silent, Oscar-nominated man of action (his fifth)who ferrets out truth in the face of uni¬versal hostility, buoyed by the veterancasting support of Lee Marvin, ErnestBorgnine, Dean Jagger, Walter Bren¬nan, and Ann Francis as the guilt-rid¬den, secretive townspeople. Even thefinal showdown, marred by its Moltov-cocktail subtlety, manages to maintaineffectiveness. Bold, pretentioushokum. Thurs., Mar. 1 at 8:30 p.m.LSF. $2. -PF CALENDAR .illTUESDAYIsraeli Folkdancing at Ida Noyes, 8pmHillel: Midrash Class, 8pm.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Islam In China,3:30, Pick 218.Career and Placement: Recruiters from Central In¬telligence Agency, RC 201. Sign-up.Calvert House: Investigation into Catholicism7pm.Committee on Arms Control & Disarmament: Meet¬ing 7pm, Ida Noyes Lounge.Microbiology Seminar: C-MYC Oncongene Activa¬tion by Chromosomal Translocation, 4pm, CLSC1117.Slavic Forum: The Role of the Bulgarian Church inthe Bulgarian Renascence and the Liberation of Bul¬garia, 3:30pm, Pick 022.DOC: The Big Heat, 8pm, Cobb $2.Career & Placement: Summer Jobs and Internships,Reynolds Club 201.WEDNESDAYCareer and Placement: Masspirg, RC 201. Sign-up.Crossroads: English, 2pm. Social Hour, 3:30. Begin¬ning German, 7pm.Rockefeller Chapel: 8am, Ecumenical Service ofHoly Communion followed by breakfast, CarillonRecital and Tower Tour, 12:15.Biochemistry Seminar: Expression and StructureofLens Crystalline Genes, 4pm, CLSD 101.Women’s Union Meeting, 6:30pm, Ida Noyes.Badminton Club, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.English and Scottish Dance, 8pm, Ida Noyes.Bridge Club, 7pm, Ida Noyes.Pro-Life Association, Wednesday, 7:30pm IdaNoyes 3rd FI. LSF: The Navigator, 8:30pm, Law Sch. $2.DOC: Hamlet, 8pm, Cobb $2.SAO Jazz Band High Noon Concert: 12-1:30 pm.North Lounge Reynolds Club.THURSDAYHillel: Advanced Talmud Class, 5:30pm.Rockefeller Chapel: Choral Vesper Service, 5:15pm.Chancel Choir Rehearsal, 5:45.Career & Placement: Mead Johnson & Company,RC 201. Sign-up.Center for the Study of Industrial Societies: Institu¬tionalized Dominance, Diffuse Status and Gender inthe Workplace, 12 noon, Wilder House.Center for Middle Eastern Studies: Hebrew Circle,Freedom of Art in the Kibbuts in Israel, Dr. 1:30pm,Gates-Blake 321.Romance Lang, and Lit.: Slide-show discussion onFASC Quarter-Abroad Program in France, 10amand 3pm. Social Science 122.German Club, STAMMTISCH, 9pm, C-Shop.Basic Theater: Uncommon Women & Others, 8pm,3rd Floor Theater.CAUSE: Meeting, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes.Music Dept: Marty Schoenhals, piano, Beethoven,sonata Op. 7, 12:15pm, Goodspeed Recital Hall.Free.Music Dept.: Iris String Quartet; 8pm, Good SpeedRecital Hall. Free.German Club: Der Biberpelz, 4:30, Quantrell.LSF: Bad Day At Black Rock, 8:30, $2.DOC: The Black Box, 8pm, Cobb. $2.I-House Film Society: Aparjito, 7:15, 9:30, $2.Student Spouses Monthly Meeting, 6:30pm, IdaNoyes Hall.(?T) March of DimesOBMBieTH DEFECTS KXJNDATIONl^MBInternationalStudentsFREEFROM 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. 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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. STANLEY H. KAPLANEDUCATIONAL CENTERMarch ClassesGRE..SAT. MCAT DAT...April ClassesGMAT...GRE...SAT...ACT...4WK/MCAT SPEED READINGPREPARE FORMCAT * SAT * lSAT * OMAT • GREORE PSYCH • GRE BO * OCAT • VAT . MATWTROOUCTOM TO LAW SCHOOL * SPEED READINGSS>.T#PSAT#OAT ACHIEVEMENTS*ACT*CPATOEFL * MSKP * NM6 1 tt 111 * ECFMG * FLEXN-CLEX*CGFNS*FMGEMS*NPB t*ESL*NC8 1SPNNG, SUMMER FALL INTENS/VESCourses constantly updated flexibleprograms and hours Visit any center andsee for yourself whv we make thedifference Speed Reading Coursefeatures Free Demo lesson—Can fordays & timesPraperaeon Sppn.MN once '930ARLINGTON HEIGHTSCHICAGO CENTERHKxHLAND PARKLA GRANGE CENTER 312)312312312 437-6650764-5151433-7410352-5840CXaeo* N v Sum On*, Can Ton f,„ aoo 223 iT2Cenuu » Map* u S Ciaaa Puano Rico Toronto CanadaI DRIESSHAH:COMPREHENSIONMan does not have a ca¬pacity of instant com¬prehensionSo rare is the knowledgeof how to train this, thatmost people, and almost allinstitutions, have com¬promised by playing uponman s proneness to condi¬tioning and indoctrination in¬steadThe end of that road isthe ant-heap; or, at best, thebeehiveReflectionsrvcnicruiiwi ioOctagon Press $7.95Available atSeminary Co-op Bookstore5757 S. universityUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5750 S. Ellisor promptly by mail fromBMK Book Service, Opt C lPO Bon 176 lov Altov ca uan;?14—The Chicago Maroon-Tuesday, February 28, 1984_ ■ M—SPACE4 room Co-op apt, well-kept court bldg. nr.campus. Usable as 2 bedroom, $16,000.536-38815704 S. Harper 3Vi rooms $390. Call MarkWilson 643-7804.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.Sunny furnished studio avail March Good loca¬tion 55th & Blackstone rent includes all utilitylaundry fac call 241-7319.Fern rmmate: share lovely Ig apt $205/monear transp, shopping. Call 752-1512 eves.Spend Spring at the SHORELAND in very Igeqd ktchn fac pvt bath carpeting evr rm Ikvwevry wndw females call 753-8342 xll34.Large 1 bdroom apt. near campus, quiet call:days, 324 3100, ext 471/nights, 363-8455 Price$420.00. Excellent condition, spacious.LARGE SUNNY room in 3br 2 bath apt 53 8.Harper $200/month & utilities available earlyMarch Call Les 643-5635after 6pm.Female rmmta wanted w/2 others Non-smokergrad stdnt preferred. 53rd & Harper On 3 cam¬pus bus routes 207.65 or less 241 6380 eves.Huge 2 br 2 bath apt in Windermere. New Kit¬chen lots of storage, great view of park. AvailApril 1. Rent 800/month. 241-6737 late eves.Close to campus. Spotless, turn of the centuryapt, in well maintained bldg at 58th & Ken¬wood. Can function as 2, 3 or 4 bedroom. Idealfor students. $700 MO. -F 750 security deposit.Village One, Inc 241 7208.For rent or sublease from April 1: 2 bdrm, 2bath apt in 56th St Highrise, 2 blocks from 1C$729 a mo; Includes 24 hr doorman, centralheat and air. Stunning view. Call 752 1081.Rm avlbl in 3 bedroom apt. Hyde ParkHighrise GREAT Lake view $122/mthnonsmoking grad female preferred call 5381962.Get the insider's price on an imminent HydePark co op conversion. One bdr apts avail insmall member run bldg present mon charges$300 Buy it for $11000 with $2500 down call 6436164.SPACIOUS 4rm apt avail immed. on 55th andEverett $410/mo heat Call Maureen days 962-1700 (Iv message) eves 643 5642.Large 2V? rm studio avail Apr quarter throughAug with option to renew One mo rent FREECall 288 2312 before 12 pm. Keep trying!1 bedroom, condo for lease ultramodern kitchen & bath new range & refrigerator, freeparking space. Mr Andrews 623-7668.Sublet March 20 through Sept 1984. Elegantlyfurnished, including piano, 2 bedroom apt,close to campus; excellent security. Rent S425plus utilities call 962 9538 days 752-1922 evenings.SPACE WANTEDFemale Grad Student seeks room in house orapt I am quiet non smoking considerate CallJulie at 294 3556 M-F, 8 5, leave message.Looking for nice 3 bdrm apt near campus. 7532240 #1418 Please leave message and phone.Planning to sublet this summer? Wanted:2bdrm apt for summer sublet. June 10 to Fallquart. '84. Contact 753 3752*318 or 753-2261*456eve.FOR SALE74 Mustang: ps/pb new exhaust system, tires;recently tuned - needs carb. possible otherwork, any reasonable offer considered 241 6737eves, keep trying.WANTEDPapers of Merit from all diciplines to fillmailbox in Ida Noyes Cloakroom. Inquirymagazine.PEOPLE WANTEDHealthy non-smoking paid volunteers soughtfor research into the common cold. Call 7913713.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 process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962 8859.Student w/background in finance or acctg forbookkeeping. Part time 10-15 hours/wk.$6.00/hour. Mike Gross 944-2525.Fathers and Sons needed for participation in aclinical research study of the father/son rela¬tionship after divorce in families wheremother has custody. If the divorce occurredbetween 2 and 4 years ago and your son is now 9or 10 years old, please contact John Palen formore information at 324-5489.Handicapped wife needs woman student tostay over nights during husband's absence IHBHiMar 18 24th Tel 962-7330, eve 363-0099.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.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955 4417.Professional0522 Processor/Typist/Editor: 363PRECISION 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 Pack¬ing and Loading services. Many other services. References. Bill 493-9122.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962-6263.ARCHITECTURAL QUALITY REMODELL¬ING Reliable, neat, guaranteed on-time completion. References available. LOSETH CON¬STRUCTION CO. 363 2202.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.HYDE PARK PSYCHOTHERAPYASSOCIATES: We work together to offer helpfor a wide range of problems. Most of our offices 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.Roosevelt Univ LSAT GMAT Prep-Loop &Suburbs, Free Sample Class at RU 6:30 LSAT3/29, GMAT 3/28. 341 3660.NEED A BABYSITTER? PhD Stu wife willBABYSIT in my home (51st Univ Hsg) Extensive teaching & childcare exp Refs avail 6247256.Experienced UC trained psychologist HydePark and Loop Insurance or Norton Knope 3635011.Children's Dance/Movement Classes Ages 3-6Given by Deborah Heller at Hyde Park UnionFor more info call 248-0703 evenings.DAYTONA BEACH. MARCH 17-24. Spend Spring Break getting a tan in Sunny Florida. 8Days/7 Nights at the INTERNATIONAL INNon the beach for only $139 per person. For information and reservations call SUMMITTOURS 1-800-325 0439.Babysitting my place graduate wife comfortable comfy house inexpensive rates call363 804 2SCENESWRITERS' WORKSHOP PL2 8377German Club Film, "Der Biberpelz" onThurs., 3/1 at 4:30 in Quantrell. SGFC Funded.PERSONALSRIDESRide needed to Ann Arbor, Ml nearly anyweekend, will share costs. Jim 363 7705 eves.PETSTHE GROUP BOOKKEEPER-OFFICEMGR-$250 TO STARTResponsibilities (2 restaurants) for:General ledger bank statements & reconciliations quarterly & payroll taxes work with apple2E (will train if necessary) pleasant phone personality dealing with public, 1/4 time HydePark 3/4 downtown (parking provided) CallDavid mornings 8 10 at 643-5500939 6600THE MEDICIDELIVERS! 667-7394Sun-Thurs:12:30am. 4pm 11:30pm, Fri-Sat: 4pm-LENS RIOTOver 200 lenses in stock and at least 100 mustbe sold this month. Prices you won't believe!Help us clear our stock before inventory!These are all first quality lenses. MODELCAMERA 1342 E. 55th 493 6700.BLACKFRIARSNeed some dinner Sat Night? Come to eat Pizza and discuss Pajama Game. Chez Morrow5325 S. Hyde Pk Blvd 313 6pm. Bring $3 BYOB.Be there aloha!A spirit of inquiry is alive and well at theUniversity of Chicago.ATTN: Richard Murphy, graduate of Univ ofMich in Biochem (1983), Marist HS (1978). Iguess I shouldn't have sent the good luckcharms because they've only brought bad luckto our friendship. I apologize. I hope we canpick up where we left off in August before youleft Ann Arbor. I will be moving at the end ofMarch (from Verona) and would like to sendyou my new address. I would like to haveyours. I'd really like to hear from you again.Candy W. Univ of Wis. Madison, ElementaryEd.KITTEN, We're giving it away. It's 2 3 monthsold affectionate, housebroken. 955-0729.GALA 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. 962-9734.UNCOMMON WOMENBasic Theater Co. presents UncommonWomen And Others. Feb. 24, 25, 26 and March1, 2, 3 8:00 pm, Reynolds Club 3rd FloorTheater $3.004TH YEARUNDERGRADUATESEarn $4.00 in less than 30 minutes by par¬ticipating in a study on long term memory.Call 962-8856. after 1pm SOLIDARNOSC!A lecture entitled "Solidarity: Truths andMyths" will be given by Peter Swistak on FriMarch 2 at 7:00pm in the East Lounge of IdaNoyes. Mr. Swistak, a member of Solidaritywill entertain questions during the receptionfollowing the presentation Sponsored byPASU. FOTA MEETINGStudents interested in participating in theFestival of the Arts, please attend a FOTAmeeting on Thursday, March 1. 4pm in room218 Ida Noyes Hall.RESUME SERVICEExtensive type styles & paper selection. Prompt service. Copyworks 5210 S. Harper 2882233.DOES YOURMINDMATTER?It does to us. Earn money by participating instudies of left right brain function. Right andleft-handers needed. Call 962 7591.LESBIAN? GAY?GALA holds a Discussion/Coffeehouse everyTue at 9 pm at 5615 S. Woodlawn Friends, food,conversation in unpressured setting 962 9734FINALS CRUNCHGOT YOU DOWN?Under too much pressure before final exams?Don’t know if you'll get that last paper or problem set done? Not able to spend enough timewith a boyfriend or girlfriend because youhave too much? The hotline is willing to lend anear and listen. You can call us seven nights aweek, 7pm-7am Our number is 753-1777.PARTY FORGARY HART MAROON9629555All are invited to a party tonight, to watch NewHampshire Primary returns and celebrateSenator Gary Hart's surging campaign forPresident. At the Grand & Wells Tap, 531 N.Wells Street (Near North), 9:00-12:00 p.m. ForInformation, Call 440-1806.—TA1 SAM YWi—■J »CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 1 1 A.-8:30 P M.Closed Monday1318 t. 63rd MU 4-1062 Need Help With Typing?CallAnderson-BurrellSecretarial Services417 S. Dearborn427-9200Resumes ReportsThesis Term PapersWord ProcessingReasonable RatesApartment Shopping?Choice Hyde Park Locations!5136 S. Harper—5134 $. Harper2 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 Cornell—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, Inc.1459 east hyde park boulevardChicago, illinois 60615 • 684-8900The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, February 28, 1984—15>} FOR IT!MORRY’S GOT IT!IStrhai 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 DON’T FORGET OUR...CHARBROILED STEAK ^ 2Complete dinner with salad, roll, french fries, donutsqpfp I^CDAD Marinated, charbroiled SQ84DC Cl IVCDvD steak & vegetables MmComplete dinner with salad, roll, french fries, donutsFRESH BROOK TROUT $284We charbroil the whole fish (deboned, ™of course) with butter and seasonings. Great!Complete dinner with salad, roll, french fries, donutsCHARBROILED CHICKEN $284One-half jumbo chicken wonderfully charbroiledserved with salad, roll, french fries and donutsVEAL PARMESAN Sete $284LASAGNA MEAT OR VEGETABLEComplete dinner $984mmMAKE MORRY’S YOUR PLACEFOR DINNER... EVERY NIGHT!OUR $2.84 SPECIALS ARETHE BEST BUY IN TOWN!« YOUR DORM DINNER ALTERNATIVE! »*MORRY’S DEUIN HUTCHINSON COMMONS1131 E. 57th Streetmum Jane Henry C.MORTON- MURPHY=AWARDFor Contributions to Extracurricular ActivitiesApplications for WINTER QUARTERNow Availableroom 210 - Ida Noyes Hail - 962-9554Deadline: MARCH 16(TAKENOTE!With winter almost gone, 3MPost-it Notes make a good way toplan those spring jobs. Keep aPost-it Note Tray with pads handyand Post them on Post-it Tiles &Bulletin Boards. Even if you don’tdo the job, it GOT POSTED!By 3MMasterCard—— Stationery Department2nd Floor • 970 E. 58th St.962*8729 or I.B.X. 5-4103 sdmmm