The Chicago MaroonVolume 94, No. 19 The University of Chicago Friday, November 9, 1984Archbishop O’Connordefends political roleBy Anthony CashmanArchbishop of New York JohnJ. O’Connor lectured Wednesdayon the motivations of the bishopsin writing their pastoral letter onwar and peace, and thelegitimacy of church leaders’participation in secular,specifically political, matters.The Archbishop’s lecture wasthe first in a series on politics andreligion presented by the JohnOlin Center for Studies inDemocratic Thought.Archbishop O’Connor firstqualified himself, stating that hewas speaking as “an individuallecturer,” not as a representativeof official church position, sayinghe considered himself “a partici¬pant observer.”O’Connor spoke out on the rightof church officials and religiousleaders to participate in politicalthought and to make politicalstatements. He contended that itis because of the gravity of worldtension and the nonethelesshopeful possibility of peace over¬coming global destruction thatthe bishops of the United States“appear convinced that they donot have the right to divorcepolitics from the realm of faithand morals.”O’Connor further asserted that“it is not an option, but their dutyas peacemakers to contribute to acommunity of conscience,” bywhich we might be able to arriveat peace and avert nuclear war.The archbishop then cited thethree-fold basis for his position:first, many of the stands that hehas taken, particularly as amember of the committee thatwrote the pastoral letter onnuclear war, are based on“universal moral principles bin¬ding all peoples everywhere.”Second, the “formal, officialteaching of the Catholic Church”guides him and binds allCatholics.Third, some positions arisefrom “prudential moraljudgements based on observa¬tions and applications of morallaw.”These three components serveas the categories of thestatements made in the ar¬chbishop’s main focus, thepastoral letter, “The Challenge ofPeace: God’s Promise and OurResponse.”The Pastoral serves as an ex¬ample, according to O’Connor, ofthe justified involvement ofreligious leaders in politics.O’Connor stated that religiousdoctrine must be considered aforce in politics because “criticaljudgements must be made” byworld leaders. He further ex¬plained that “in a day when aserious mistake can threaten thesurvival of much of the world,everything conceivable must bedone to prevent mistakes.”Therefore, the bishops feltcompelled to attempt to heightena “national consciousness” aboutthis issue through a “fresh ap¬praisal of war.” O’Connor stated,“The bishops speak because theycannot remain silent: the evil anddanger of nuclear proliferationand the lurking possibility ofnuclear war involve our nation indecisions that transcend themilitary and the political. Fun¬damental moral choices are atstake and these choices must beinformed by rational moraldiscourse.”O’Connor said that this “freshappraisal of war” rests on thebelief that nuclear war is morallywrong. This rests not solely onCatholic Church teaching butrather “natural moral law, writ¬ten in the hearts of all human be¬ings.”Furthermore, he added, “thebishops suggest the building of ‘abarrier against the concept ofnuclear war as a viable strategyof defense’ and a resistance to therhetoric which would suggest the winning of a nuclear war.”O’Connor was also motivated towrite the Pastoral which is alsoconsistent with his concept of themoral duty of religious leaders.O’Connor said that the committeewas dedicated to declaring thenecessity of peace.O’Connor declared that “It isthe sadness of knowing how wehuman beings cut ourselves offfrom one another, to close out allhope of reconciliation, to offerone another only a bridge of noreturn.” He further stated that hebelieves “it was largely becauseof (the bishops’) passionate con¬viction that for Almighty Godthere is no such thing as a bridgeof no return.” Thus, the bishopscommitted themselves to the ideaof their leader Pope John Paul IIwho stated that “peace is possi¬ble,” through God.For most of his lecture O’Con¬nor avoided the issue for which heis most well known, abortion andhis vigorous denouncement of it.Nevertheless. O’Connor main¬tained his positions on thejustification of religious leadersmaking political statements andthe need for total peace to refer tohis stance on abortion.O’Connor stated “There can beno peace without justice. Andthat means justice without excep¬tion for every human person,” in¬cluding “the unborn.”Because Archbishop O’Connorwas ill, he could field only twoquestions. One question howeverasked the archbishop about hisattack on the Democratic Partyplatform and Ms. Geraldine Fer-continued on page three U of C students and representatives of gay rights and liberal political groups gather in Hutch Court to protestArchbishop O’Connor’s campus appearance150 protest O’Connor on abortionBy Michael LotusClaiming that religious beliefsare personal and should not be us¬ed to influence voters, studentorganizations held a rally andvigil Wednesday afternoon pro¬testing the policies of ArchbishopJohn J. O’Connor. The protestswere organized by the CollegeDemocrats, DemocraticSocialists of America, GALA, andthe Womens Union.The rally was held in Hutch Court between noon and 1:00P.M. Approximately 150 peoplelistened to the speakers from thesponsoring organizationscriticize O’Connor’s stand onabortion and the legal rights ofgays. They also criticized theOlin Center, which sponsoredO’Connor’s lecture, as being par¬tisan and claimed that the centerwas associated with armamentsmanufacturers.Irwin Keller, spokesman forBob’s newsstand faces hard timesBy Steven SorensenBob’s Newstand (5100 S LakePark Ave.) has been a thrivingenterprise within the Hyde Parkcommunity for over 20 years.However, its days may now benumbered. As recently as tenmonths ago, Bob was operating 5stores in the Chicago area. Now,the newsstand on 51st is the onlyone remaining.Bob has been famous or infa¬mous over the years for variousreasons. Perhaps most contro¬versial is Bob’s reputation forproviding a wide variety of sexpublications. As recently as 3years ago, Bob was making alarge profit selling sex maga¬zines, and interestingly enough,Bob says his best customers werestudents and faculty... “I addedcopies and selection to meet thestrong demand.’’ Bob feels that Uof C people found diversion fromtheir daily activities in the sexpublications. However, Bob wasapproached by a leading memberof the University who asked himto curtail sales and selection, cit¬ing the poor influence sex publi¬cations were having on students.Bob complied and cut way backon his selection of sex maga¬zines.Bob also gained notoriety forhis large selection of periodicals.He at one time carried more than3000 different magazines. Withthis large selection, Bob was ableto appeal to intellects of all types,and accordingly attracted manycustomers. Unfortunately, thosedays are gone. Bob can no longermove enough magazines to makea profit. He’s dropping most ofthose magazines in favor of newproducts.Just how serious are Bob’s fi¬nancial difficulties? His suppliersclaim he’s behind on paymentsfor his inventory. Bob contendsthat he’s still making a buck, buthe concedes that times have beenvery tough. Bob says, “It’s toughto see your name come off a mammBob’s still attracts customersbuilding 4 times in 10 months. Ifeel beat up...spent.” Bob also re¬alizes he’s taken some bad risks.Right now, he’s got thousands ofcards for all occasions. Fortuna¬tely, most of them are Christmascards so he hopes to sell them thisseason. In fact, right now there’sa “buy two, get one free” saleBut, he’s got a lot of money in in¬ventory that could be used to paya few bills and do a little storemodification.The main reason for the store’sdecline is changing demogra¬phics. Bob says that he justdoesn’t have the same audiencehe did a few years ago. What wasonce a multi- million dollar(sales) business has reallydropped off. The university typeshave steadily been migrating tothe suburbs and the people thathave taken their places just don'tfind great enjoyment in readingWhat about the future? Bob willbe in business as long as the com¬munity supports him. He’s tryingto alter his product mix to includeitems that might be more appeal¬ing. Assuming he gets the land¬lord’s blessing, Bob plans to offerfast food items and ice creambars. This will aao a convenienceaspect to the store. Bob’s still inthe sex business He buys and sells old Playboy and Penthouseissues as collectors items, and ofcourse, he offers the currentissues as well. Says Bob, “Sexpays. Not everybody can read,but everybody can look at pic¬tures.” So if you’re averse to sexperiodicals, stay clear!Bob is also going to real estateschool at night. His only regret isthat he quit school at 14 (that’swhen he opened his first news¬stand). He hopes to get his real¬tor’s license. When asked for aconcluding statement, Bob re¬plied, “I’ve studied art, photo¬graphy, been a carpenter, wrotefor newspapers, taken picturesfor newspapers, drawn cartoonsfor newspapers, sold ads fornewspapers, and distributednewspapers I may have oncedone all those things for love,cause I sure didn’t do them formoney, but I think 20 years isenough of life to devote to print. Iwant to see what’s over the nexthill. Maybe if I can get a real es¬tate license. I can sell the nexthill!” GALA claims that “the Ar¬chbishop extended his moralauthority beyond reasonablebounds.” Keller noted two ofO’Connor’s actions that he believ¬ed were particularly objec¬tionable. The first was O’Con¬nor’s criticism of Geraldine Fer¬raro for her stand on abortionThe other was O’Connor’s lawsuitin New York City that led to therepeal of executive order 50,which had prevented jobdiscrimination against gays.Keller went on to say that thesetwo cases were examples of alarger issue. His group and theothers protesting the Ar¬chbishop’s speech believe thelegal impostion of a particularmoral viewpoint to be a threat tocivil liberties. When askedwhether he thought that mostpeople at the University weresympathetic with the protest,Keller responded that he believedthey were and that “this is not amatter of liberal or conservativebut the right to think for one’sself.” Eric Rosenthal of theDemocratic Socialists ofAmerica also claimed that thereal issue was “pluralism.” andobjected to the selective denial ofrights to any person or groupThe second part of the protestwas a vigil in the North entrace tothe Reynolds club. Protestersheld signs and candles andchanted in Latin. The Archbishopdid not pass the picketers, butentered through a side door Theprotesters wished to contrasttheir peaceful behavious withthat of militant pro-life groupsThe protest was not funded bySG, but was paid for out of thegroups own funds, and wasorganized in four days. Leafletsdetailing the groups’ positionwere distributed.InsideHARC EXPLAINED P. 3WEAK FOREIGN POLICY THREATENS US R 4GCJ GCJ GCJNO REAGAN ARTICLES THIS ISSUE4•**THE AKIBA-SCHECHTER JEWISH DAY SCHOOLPresentsTHECHICAGO SYMPHONYCHAMBER PLA YERS• SAMUEL MAGAD, violin• MILTON PREVES, viola• FRANK MILLER, cello• DALE CLEVENGER, hornwith guestCAROL HONIGBERG, pianoPROGRAM' MOZART Divertimento for String Trio, K. 563BEETHOVEN Horn Sonata, Op. 17BRAHMS Horn Trio, Op. 40SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11th, 2:30 P.M.Congregation Rodfei Zedek5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd.TICKETS: $12.50 TICKET INFORMATION:$ 6.00 (Students) Call 493-8880BENEFIT FOR THE AKIBA-SCHECHTER JEWISH DAY SCHOOL=H=Your key to■ comprehensive■ convenient■ cost-effectivehealth careThe University of Chicago Health PlanSign up November 12 and 13,9 am— 4 pm/Medical Center G-104November 14, 9 am—4 pm/The Cloister in Ida Noyes HallFor more information, call:University Health Service 962-6840Human Resources 962-1095Staff Benefits 962-1955 nriTheMAROONEXPRESSPUT ASIDE THE SORROWS OF ELECTION DA Y AND HEADUP NORTH WITH THE CONVENIENT MAROON EXPRESS...... Friday night see “The Cure” at the Bismarck Theatre. Get off at the Art Institutestop and head over to Randolph and LaSalle—call 666-6667 for ticket info.... while in the loop Sat. night attend the Chicago Symphony Orchestra concert at 8PM. Leonard Slatkin conductor (Haydn, Karlins, Edgar). Cali 435-8111 for ticketinfo. Get off at Art Institute—one block south on Michigan.... take time out for a movie. “First Born” showing at Water Tower. “Body Double”showing at the Carnegie on Rush Street. Water Tower Stops.Tickets may be purchased with a U of C studentID at the Ida Noyes Information desk, ReynoldsClub Box Office, or any Residence Hall Frontdesk. A 10-ride coupon booklet good for oneacademic quarter is available for $10; individualone-way tickets cost $1.25. Note: Each ticket isvalid for ONE ride.The final ran of the MAROON EXPRESS for Winter Quarter is Sat., Mar. 3.Schedule for Maroon ExpressSouthboundDivemy 4 Clark 7:45 pm 9:45 pm 11:45 pm 1:45 amNorthboundda Noyes 6:30 pm 8:30 pm 10:30 pmShoreland 6:40 pm 8:40 pm 10:40 pm • Grant HospitalArt Institute 6:55 pm 8:55 pm - - (Webster 4 Lincoln)Water Tower Place 7:10 pm 9:10 pm • Water Tower PlaceGrant Hospital 7:30 pm 9:30 pm - (I. Magnin)(Webster 4 Lincoln) An InstituteMvereey 4 Clark 7:45 pm 9:45 pm 11:15 pm 1:45 am ShorelandIda Noyes 8:30 pm 10:30 pm'Dmn-afc throughout Hyde Park, Including Shoreland and Ida NoyesMidnight 2:00 am• 12:15 am 2:15 am10:00 pm 12:30 am 2:30 amHisMajestie'sClerkesChicago’s Premier Choral EnsemblePRESENTSTreasures of Early German MusicSacred and Secular Music of the16th and 17th CenturiesDirected by Anne HeiderSunday, November 11, 3:00 PMChurch of St. Paul and the Redeemer50th and DorchesterONLY HYDE PARK APPEARANCE OF THE SEASON$8.00 ($5.00 for Seniors and Students)Subscription Tickets Available at the DoorThree Concerts - $20/$ 13For Further Information: 764-2678The University of Chicago Law Schoolpresents the secondWILBER G. KATZ LECTUREDefamation: Is New York Times v. Sullivan Wrong?byRichard A. EpsteinJames Parker Hall Professor of LawTuesday, November 13,1984Glen A. Lloyd Auditorium4:00 P.M.1111 East 60th StreetSherry Reception Following2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984Medici renews lease; will stay on 57th StreetBy Hillary TillThe Medici restaurant on 57th Streetsigned a five-year lease last August, endingspeculation that the restaurant would beclosed down or be moved to a new loca¬tion.“I came to terms with the landlord in thebeginning of August,” said the Medici’sowner, Hans Morsbach. “I have a lease, andI hope to stay here,” he added.The owner of the building on 57th andBlackstone containing the Medici is NickKaraiskakis, who also owns the nearby Sa-lonica Restaurant. When Karaiskakis firstBy Ciaran O’BroinOpportunities for University of Chicagostudents to complete a well-rounded educa¬tion by studying abroad are increasing, withgraduation credits available for most ofthem.More students are taking advantage of themany programs and scholarships that areavailable to study in a foreign country.Mary Martin, Director of the InternationalStudent Services Department said thatabout two to three hundred students came tosee her for guidance last year. Her job is toassess students’ needs and direct themtoward the most suitable program. A book¬let, “U.S. College-sponsored ProgramsAbroad,” lists programs in sixty countries,including China, Finland, Kenya, and theSoviet Union, and is available through Mar¬tin’s office.An exchange program with CambridgeUniversity was recently establishedwhereby one student, most likely a junior inthe college, will change places with a stu¬dent from Cambridge. Charles O’Connell,Vice-President and Dean of Students, saidthat the next step will be to form a commit¬tee of faculty acquainted with Cambridge.They will be responsible for choosing thestudent to be exchanged.Study-abroad programs already exist inconjunction with other schools in Bologna,Italy; Paris, France; and Mexico City, Mex¬ico. U of C students who go abroad with anyof the existing programs receive full creditfor courses and remain registered here, al¬lowing them to keep most of their financialaid, and letting them avoid the need to peti¬tion for course credit, according to Dean ofStudents in the College Herman Sinaiko.There are three types of foreign study pro¬grams: those where the student is actuallyenrolled in a foreign university and takesstandard classes, those where a studenttakes some classes from the university andsome classes created by the program, andthose where a student takes only classescreated by the program. The first type ofSouth Shore excursionThe Northern Indiana Commuter Trans¬portation District offers a South Shore ex¬cursion Sunday, November 11, leaving Ran¬dolph Station at 9:58 a.m. The event willinclude brunch at the Marriott and a shorttour of Notre Dame. The cost of the brunchis $10.95. Regular Luncheon times will beavailable also.Circle K food driveThe University of Chicago Circle K clubwill be holding its second annual Thanksgiv¬ing Food Drive from November 12 throughthe 18th. All students, faculty, and staff areencouraged to donate non-perishable goods.Collection boxes will be located in Ida NoyesHall, Stuart Hall, Harper Memorial Library(near the east entrance), Shoreland Hall.Broadview Hall, the New Graduate Resi¬dence. and Breckinridge House. bought the building about five years ago,Morsbach said that it appeared to him thatthe Salonica owner would not offer a newlease to the Medici when the old one ex¬pired.At that time, the Medici was in the thirdyear of a five-year lease. Under the terms ofthe lease negotiated with the building’s pre¬vious owner, the Medici would have an “op¬tion” to renew the lease under the originalterms after it expired, for another fiveyears.About three years ago, according to Mors¬bach, the Medici and Karaiskakis went toprogram requires a high degree of fluencyin the language of that country. As a result,a large majority of the students who ap-proachMartin wish to go to England.Also announced recently was that thisyear eleven graduate students were award¬ed Fulbright scholarships for study abroad.Other prestigious scholarships, such as theRhodes, Marshall, and Churchill scholar¬ships, have yet to be decided upon.By Helen MarkeyThe Housing Activities Resource Council(HARC), the subject of much conflict lastyear, has returned to face controversy onceagain.HARC was formed last year to providefunding to residence halls and houses forinter-dorm events. The council is comprisedof a panel of student representatives, a ma¬jority of whom are appointed by theirresidence halls. The idea behind the councilwas that it would foster inter-dorm ac¬tivities, enabling students to meet peoplefrom other dorms in a relaxed, social at¬mosphere.This year, HARC may be able to allocateup to 100% of the cost of any event. Lastyear, HARC was still in its experimentalstage, and it has yet to be decided how longthe council will remain in existence. Thesource of the funding for HARC for this yearis also unclear. Last year, HARC receivedapproximately $3000 from the Housing Of¬fice.HARC began last year on an experimen¬tal basis. After the trial period was over,Student Government included a referendumon its spring election ballot, asking ifstudents were in favor of a two dollar perquarter per student fee (including onlystudents in the residence system). While thereferendum passed with 55% of the studentsAll donations will go to the Hyde ParkFood Pantry, one of hundreds of emergencyfood pantries located throughout the Chica¬go area. The Food Pantry network is spon¬sored by church and community organiza¬tions and each is administered by a group inits respective community. They rely on con¬tributions to meet the ever growing needsfor food.For more information contact Joan Spoerlat 947-9729.Wind Ensemble plays DvorakThe Autumn Concert of the SymphonicWind Ensemble will be Dvorak's Symphonyno. 8, Tchaikovsky’s “Marche Slave,”Beethoven’s Symphony no. 1 — “Finale,”and excerpts from Greig’s “Peer Gynt”.The presentation will be given Saturday,November 10, at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hail.There is no admission charge. court because Karaiskakis did not want tohonor the option that was part of the oldlease. The Medici won the case.Last year a few Hyde Park “Me’dicilovers” started a campaign to ensure thatthe Medici would stay in its present loca¬tion. Morsbach said that their efforts wereindependent of him, but he was “verypleased” with their support. Their effortsincluded “Save the Medici” bumperstickers and Maroon classified ads, whichwarned of the Medici’s imminent demise.When Karaiskakis was asked aboutwhether there was ever any chance of theMedici restaurant on 57th St. being closed,he said, “That is for the owner (of the Medi¬ci) to decide.” He said that he liked the Me¬dici because “it brings people to 57thStreet,” which in turn helps the Salonica.Karaiskakis said that the problem in thenegotiations for a new lease was “over howhigh the rent would be.” Under the oldlease, “it was very, very cheap here,” theSalonica owner asserted.Karaisakis said that under the terms ofthe old lease, he was paying out moremoney for building maintenance than hewas receiving in rent. “I lose money frommy pocket,” he said.Morsbach said that the truth of Karaiska-voting in favor of it, the referendum was re¬jected by the administration. Dean ofStudents in the University Charles O’Con¬nell considered the margin to be too narrowto mandale a fee. He said that the referen¬dum reflected too small a section of studentopinion to be representative.Much of last year’s controversy overHARC stemmed from the Shoreland Coun¬cil, the representative body of theShoreland. They and the people theyrepresentated were dissatisfied with theHARC proposal. The Shoreland Councilquestioned the fairness of representation,because according to HARC’s structure,each dormitory has only one represen¬tative. The Council argued that theShoreland, the largest dorm with over 600students, was underrepresented. Further¬more, many people felt that for the amountof money that would be contributed byShoreland residents, there would not be asatisfactory return. They would be donatingmore than they would ever receive in fun¬ding.Another factor that may have influencedShoreland residents’ opinion is that becauseit is a large dorm, cannot easily hold inter¬dorm functions. Any dorm-wide party thatadded another dorm’s residents would en¬counter serious difficulty due to fire codes.The Shoreland’s ballroom is limited by firecode as to the number of people it will hold.Last year, when the Shoreland Council ap¬proached HARC for funds for a Halloweenparty with Greenwood, they were rebukedby HARC. According to Frank Connolly, aShoreland Council representative at thetime, while HARC contributed some moneyto the event, the Shoreland representativeswere told that this party w as not in the spiritof HARC’s purpose, and that the Shorelandwas just trying to take advantage of HARC.This, too. may have contributed to the lackof support for HARC from the Shoreland.Whether Shoreland residents voted for oragainst the HARC fee is unknown. ElizabethMacken, president of the Shoreland Council,stated. “There was a variety of opinions.”Of the allegations that the Shoreland wasstrongly opposed to a HARC fee from theresidents, Macken commented, “WhenHousing says the Shoreland didn’t like it,it’s not clear whether they’re talking aboutthe (Shoreland) council’s decision to en¬dorse it (the council did not endorse it), orthey’re talking about the way the studentsvoted. I think that’s an important distinc¬tion.” The Shoreland Council did not en¬dorse the HARC referendum when it was in¬troduced to them early last year. Mackenquestioned the legitimacy of this as a clearindicator of how Shoreland residents felt asa whole. The views of Shoreland Councilrepresentatives do not necessarily reflectthose of the residents. Macken claimed thatit is difficult to tell how all of the membersof the Shoreland feel about a quarterlyHARC fee.The future of HARC is currently uncer¬tain. The organization is dependent on =funds. According to Director of Student *-Housing Connie Holoman, “In the <foreseeable future, we would be unable tofind funds to support HARC.” without someother source of income. The referendumwould have provided HARC with $15,000 ayear.Michael Aronson, HARC Chairman, in¬dicated that this year will be spent makingHARC’s purpose familiar to students. Theywill encourage houses to hold a variety ofevents with their funds. Aronson stated thatHARC hoped to hold open discussions withstudents to consider ways to improveHARC. Elizabeth Macken commented thatshe felt HARC should “postpone allottingfunds and reorganize and get the kinks out kis’ assertion is “possible,” given the highpurchase price of the building five yearsago. He conceded that the then existing ren¬tal income structure could not support thehigh purchase price of the building. “That iswhy I did not buy the building,” he assert¬ed.Karaiskakis emphasized that the leaseproblems with the Medici had nothing to dowith competition, just money. “I bought thebuilding for money not for free,” he said.His restaurant’s volume of business is notaffected by the presence of the nearby Me¬dici, he maintained. The Medici and the Sa¬lonica are “two different types of restau¬rants,” he explained. “I would like to seethree or four more restaurants on 57thStreet,” he added.Although the old lease would not have ex¬pired for another year and nine months,Morsbach signed the new lease last Augustto ensure the Medici’s continued presenceon 57th Street. In Morsbach’s eyes, the re¬newed leased “is not as good (as the oldone), but it is acceptable.”The new lease is a result of compromisesand tradeoffs, said Morsbach. Under thenew lease, “neither one of us has cause forcomplaint,” he concluded.first,” and then they might receive moresupport and visibility.HARC may consider requesting a newreferendum in the future. Holoman statedthat the decision about where funding willcome from has been put off, because HARC“needs more time to consider what good thefee will be.” Aronson stated that HARC islooking for some indication that a quarterlyfee would be acceptable to the residents. “Ifthere’s a general consensus, we’ll probablyact on that. If they can’t get an overall pic¬ture from various sources, then there maybe another referendum proposed (as analternative).”Fight on busBy Thomas CoxA fight broke out late Wednesday nightamong three students riding the Route Cshuttle bus just after 1 a.m. The driver ra¬dioed for assistance and stopped by a whitephone near the corner of 55th and Universi¬ty, where he called Security. University Se¬curity Director David O'Leary said that Se¬curity patrolmen responded, separated thestudents, and kept them there while the buscontinued its route.Blows were apparently exchanged in the“disturbance,” as O’Leary’s office is term¬ing the incident; one female student repor¬tedly said that another student “swung ather and missed.” No injuries were report¬ed.When the three said they would not presscharges, they were taken to their dorms bySecurity cars. Chicago police were notcalled.O’Leary could not yet offer an explana¬tion for the fracas. The students, who live inBroadview and the Shoreland. were notidentified.After the incident was over. Security re¬ferred the matter to the night duty dean,who at the time was Assistant Director ofHousing Harry Jarcho He said he can nottake the matter any further or even com¬ment on it unless one of the students in¬volved comes to him to reopen things.O’Connorcontinued from page oneraro.O’Connor responded by saying that theonly thing he said was that in response toher statement that the Catholic Churchteaching on abortion was not monolithic. “1said that I didn’t know Geraldine Ferraro; 1have no animosity toward her.” He furtherstated that her statement was a“misrepresentation of Catholic teaching ”The BSCD student Advisory committeecordially invites you to aSTUDENT-FACULTY GET-TOGETHEREnzymes and Vitalism: Ponderings on Pitfalls, Prejudices,Perversions, Paradigms and otherPleasures in ScienceWednesday, November 14,1984,4:30 p.m.Harper 130Guest Speaker: Herbert Friedmann, Assoc. Prof.Biochemistry & Molecular Biology and the CollegeReception following in Harper 284Options in study abroadHARC funding still in long-term limboThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984—3LETTERSMAROON INACCURATEON O’CONNORTo the editor:We regret that the Maroon, in the courseof publicizing the protests planned againstArchbishop O’Connor’s lecture, misin¬formed its readers that the lecture was to beat 4:30 PM rather than 4:00 p.m., though thetime could easily have been checked withour posters, advertisements in the Maroonitself, or the Olin Center’s office.We also regret that the Maroon likewisemisreported that the lecture series is spon¬sored by the Olin Foundation, rather than bythe University of Chicago’s John M. OlinCenter for Inquiry into the Theory and Prac¬tice of Democracy, as could also easily beascertained from the sources mentioned. Al¬though the Olin Foundation gave the Univer¬sity a grant to fund the Olin Center, theCenter is a part of the University, governedby its administration and faculty. The OlinFoundation is not responsible for our specif¬ic activities, and we are not responsible fortheirs, let alone for those of other past recip-By John P. EganAmerican foreign policymakers continueto ignore the power of Third World national¬ism. As a result, American lives are lost inforeign policy blunders, and American in¬terests throughout the world are jeopar¬dized. How long can America remain so outof touch with the surrounding world?Twenty years after the fateful Gulf of Ton¬kin resolution, which opened the doors to adecade of war in southeast Asia, US foreignpolicymakers have refused to discard su¬perpower bi-polarity as the dominant para¬digm of world politics.In the years since World War II, decolon¬ization has taken place at a rapid pace. En¬tire continents once under European controlhave achieved independence. There were 51member-states at the founding of the UnitedNations in 1945; now the UN has 159member-states. Any serious examination ofworld politics since 1945 would indicate thatnationalism and the quest for indpendeneeand self-determination are potent, perhapsinexorable, forces.Yet American foreign policy since 1945has concentrated on containing and combat¬ting the “communist threat’’ from Moscow.Regional conflicts continue to be cast in anEast-West light, with the assertion that Mo¬scow and its allies instigate and control pop¬ular revolutions throughout the world. Inter¬national politics is still seen as a zero-sumgame, where any American “loss” is a“gain” for Moscow.Worried about “communist gains” insoutheast Asia, America financed France’scolonial war against Vietnam in the early1950s. Although intelligence reports at thattime indicated that the anti-colonial Nation¬al Liberation Front <NLF) was the only po¬litical force in South Vietnam with any popu¬lar legitimacy, policymakers ignored thesereports and supported tyrant after unpopu¬lar tyrant in South Vietnam. Each Ameri¬can-supported ruler was more brutal andhated than his predcessor. The US was even¬tually drawn into Vietnam to bolster theflagging support of these leaders; ultimate¬ly, southeast Asia was destroyed largely be- ients of their grants.We should nevertheless add for your infor¬mation that the lecture series at Brown,about which you repeat an anonymous accu¬sation that it was “partisan”, included not“conservative columnist George Will”, butliberal columnist Garry Wills, as well asformer Carter Administration officialsStansfield Turner and Samuel P. Hunting-ton, and liberal scholars Stanley Hoffmannand Seweryn Bialer. More important, in¬stead of repeating inaccurate and irrelevantanonymous charges of remote guilt by asso¬ciation, the Maroon might have remindedits readers that the Olin Center’s own activi¬ties have been in no way partisan. We wouldrecommend that the Maroon check with aresponsible individual or organization whenreporting its activities.Sincerely,Allan BloomNathan TarcovCo-directors,John M. Olin CenterARENT LIBRARIESFOR STUDENTS?To the editor:Last Thursday I had a quiz in Physics 121.The quizzes in physics are given at 6:30 inthe evening, and that afternoon I went toCrerar Library to check out the class’s prob¬lem sets. As I walked to the library en¬trance. I noticed a huge tent on the Crerarcause U.S. policymakers refused to questiontheir assumptions about the anti-colonialnationalism of the NLF.Today, in Central America, only brutal re¬pression and continuous American militaryassistance keep the rulers of Honduras,Guatemala, and El Salvador in power. Pop¬ular revolutionary movements in thesecountries are dismissed by American poli¬cymakers, who blame the Soviet Union,Cuba, and Nicaragua for supplying and fi¬nancing the guerrillas.However, as former CIA analyst DavidMacMichael has been pointing out for sever¬al months, Nicaraguan arms shipments toCentral America ceased almost entirelyafter 1981. Never one to let facts get in theway of a crusade, the Reagan administra¬tion continues to wage an undeclared waragainst Nicaragua. When direct govern¬mental aid to the anti-Sandinista contraswas blocked by Congress, the administra¬tion encouraged American mercenaries tocontinue the fight south of the border.A similar failure of purpose has charac¬terized American policy toward the Pales¬tinians. Implaccably hostile to Palestiniannational aspirations. American policy¬makers first tried to sidetrack Palestiniannationalism with the Camp David accords,which laid responsibility for the Palestin¬ians with King Hussein of Jordan. When theKing declined this responsibility, Americaacquiesced to Israel’s continued coloniza¬tion of the West Bank and Gaza. When Pa¬lestinians there resisted Israeli coloniza¬tion, Israel received tacit Americanapproval for the invastion of Lebanon. The1982 invasion of Lebanon sought to obviatethe Palestinian question by destroying thePalestine Liberation Organization in Beirut.However, the Palestinians have held fast totheir national aspirations: they don’t wantto be ruled by either King Hussein or Israel.They want an independent state.Nationalism and the dynamics of anti-co¬lonialism are major forces in the worldtoday. America’s own struggle for indepen¬dence and self-determination has inspiredrevolutionary movements throughout the quad and casually wondered what was goingon. When I went in the front door, 1 was in¬formed that the new library was being dedi¬cated and that students were barred fromthe library. I explained to the door attendantthat I just wanted to get my problem setsand leave. Of course, he told me that wasimpossible. I thanked him and left Crerardetermined to find out who was responsiblefor preventing students from using the li¬brary. I went to see the Dean of Students inthe College, Herman Sinaiko, and he in¬formed me that I’d been “screwed." He hadno idea who was responsible for this atroci¬ty, but he suggested that I ask the StudentOmbudsman.I did not go see the Student Ombudsmanbecause I knew that there was no way thelibrary was going to magically open up andproduce physics problems sets. I am notwriting this letter to ensure that physicsproblems sets are always available. I mere¬ly want someone to realize that this is an¬other instance where the University admin¬istration places the students in the back seatbehind the wealthy alumni, (The adminis¬tration also placed the alumni’s wants infront of the students’ needs in deciding tochange the Ida Noyes gym into a theater.)Have you ever tried to study at Crerar dur¬ing the day? There are plenty of desks andchairs, but there are also many loud toursthrough the study areas. Of course, studentsare free to leave to study somewhere else,but when problem sets are incarcerated inCrerar, students are forced into trying togain access to the library.Why were students barred from the li-world, and yet Americans profess senti¬ments ranging from confusion to outrighthostility when viewing the rise of ThirdWorld national movements.At the policymaking level, failure to real¬ize the power of nationalism, or attemptingto crush it through repression, carriesserious consequences. A subject people willdevote all their energies to their nationalstruggle, and the configuration of a post¬independent society will be influenced bythe degree to which America participated inthat society’s previous subjugation.Third World national movements say thatit is better to die on your feet than to live onyour knees. US foreign policymakers woulddo well to think about this; after all, our an¬cestors said the same thing.John P. Egan is a graduate student in Politi¬cal Science.By Rich TraubeThose who missed the debate between L.Francis Bouchey and Raymond Bonnermissed quite a lot. But so did those who readthe Maroon’s summary, which trivializedthe debate by not presenting many of theideas discussed that night. What follows isan attempt to present some of those ideas.Last week’s debate, “The United Statesrole in Central America: defending democ¬racy or supporting oppression?” met itspurpose. The issues, events and controver¬sies were adequately aired. Bouchey assert¬ed that the United States is defending de¬mocracy in Central America and madesuggestions to help further that end. Bonnerclaimed the United States is supporting op¬pression and proposed changed to tip policytoward the defense of democracy. Consider¬ing the time constraints, the speakers evenmanaged to refine their arguments and thenmake proposals for changing US policy.The lines of debate were drawn veryquickly. “United States support for democ¬racy in Central America is the story of tworevolutions and six elections: a stolen revo¬lution in Nicaragua, and a burgeoning dem¬ocratic revolution that is proceeding apacein El Salvador.” So began Bouchey’s open¬ing statement.To contrast the two revolutions, Boucheydescribed how Marxist-Leninist Sandinistasstole the Nicaraguan revolution. “The broadopposition, the democratic forces, joined to¬gether leagued with the FSLN, which wasMarxist-Leninist... with the understandingthat a commitment to pluralism, to democ¬racy, to freedom of the press” would bemade by the new government. The OAS alsowanted to see this commitment made. Whilein El Salvador “a group of younger officers,having seen what happened in neighboringNicaragua, ... engaged in a conspiracy toalter the character of the regime in El Sal¬vador,”This conspiracy, which Bouchey claimedwas successful, led to “acquiescence in landreform by former landowners. “You havehad the private sector holding out a hand,expressing a ... willingness to collaboratewith Napoleon Duarte.” As for the fate ofthe Nicaraguan revolution : “I do not believethat one can reasonably contend that thereis a remaining hope for pluralism if the San¬dinistas have their way.” And according toa pro-Soviet Sandinista commandante, “theobjective of the Nicaraguan revolution wasto establish a one-party state on Marxist-I^ninist lines ” brary on the day of the dedication? Don’t thelibrary and the administration exist to servethe students? Why weren’t the students in¬vited to the dedication? It seems Crerar wasbuilt as a toy for the administration toparade for the U of C alumni. More, it seemsthe administration builds toys for the alum¬ni and leaves the students to play with them¬selves.Tom WhitneyGET INVOLVED IN SGTo the editor:As we reflect on (and console ourselvesover) the results of the recent presidentialelection and the prospects of our govern¬ment’s future, let us take a few moments toexamine how Student Government is doing.From my vantage point, Student Govern¬ment is withering away before our veryeyes, yet few of us seem to have the courageto stand up and do anything about it.It’s only six weeks into the academic year,and already some of the student representa¬tives in the Assembly are engaging in all-too-familiar political infighting. People whocan regurgitate Robert’s Rules and blithelyspend Friday evenings analyzing parlia¬mentary procedure and other subtle intrica¬cies of the Constitution are up to their usualtricks. Instead of working to address ourreal concerns and needs, and instead ofserving the University community by bring¬ing new programs and activities onto thecampus, these individuals are challengingprocedural irregularities and bringing in¬consequential cases to the Student-Faculty-Administration Court These individualsmay enjoy the fun and frolic of the quasi-legal world, but their fun and frolic pose athreat to our Student Government as theyinevitably divert attention from the impor¬tant issues that will really affect us, issuessuch as the student activities fee, athleticservices and facilities, married studenthousing, etc. Our Student Government hastoo much potential. We must not let it be in¬capacitated.We currently have the strongest and har¬dest working president—vice presidentteam in recent Student Government history.Chris Hill and Brad Smith have labored tire¬lessly behind the scenes with administratorsand student group leaders to restore a senseof revelry and excitement on our campus.Yet how many of us even know what is ontheir agenda? How many of us appreciatethe amount of time they devoted in the re¬cent successful coordination of Indian Sum-Bouchey ended his opening remarks withan appeal to support the current negotia¬tions between the Salvadoran governmentand the guerillas. He stressed that the nego¬tiations are only “part of a comprehensiveapproach.” Diplomatic and political effortsin the conflict could not have happened, hesaid, “without a requisite level of militaryassistance. One simply cannot respond tobazookas and mortars with concrete andfertilizer.”In Bouchey’s view, both the Salvadoranguerillas and the Sandinistas have come tothe bargaining table due to the persistenceof U.S. military and economic aid to the Sal¬vadoran government and to the Contras.Bonner, in his opening statement, sup¬ported the Nicaraguan revolution. “I submitto you that there is more press freedom,more religious freedom, more political free¬dom and a better life for the peasants in Ni¬caragua under the Sandinistas, than therehas been in El Salvador under the govern¬ments that the U.S. has supported the last 4or 5 years with 1 billion dollars in militaryand economic aid.” Bonner criticized theUnited States’ role in the Salvadoran elec¬tions. “Look at what happened in 1982. Ro¬berto D’aubisson emerged from those elec¬tions with enough votes to become presidentof El Salvador ... The Reagan administra¬tion dispatched ... Vernon Walters, JimWright and others down there to tell the Sal¬vadorans that D’aubisson can’t becomepresident. And what did we do in 1984? Wewanted to make sure that we didn’t face thisproblem again. So the C.I.A. got involvedand they spent 32 million in the 1984 electionin El Salvador.”Bonner cited human rights abuses by theSalvadoran military and Duarte’s inabilityto prosecute or even investigate the deathsquad leaders as evidence that El Salvadoris governed by a military dictatorship. Heconcluded that the US is supporting the Con¬tras’ attacks against the Sandinista govern¬ment and aiding the Salvadoran govern¬ment in order to control the democraticprocess in these countries.During the 10 minute rebuttals, first Bou¬chey and then Bonner went on to refine theirarguments. And, having had the opportunityto assess the opponent’s arguments, theyused anecdotes, state department reports,bishops’ pastorals, reports by human rightsgroups and news stories to back theirclaims. Each challenged the other’s sourcesin an exchange which raised new issues.continued on page fiveThe Chicago MaroonThe Chicago Maroon is the official student newspaper of the University of Chicago.It is published twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays. The offices of the Maroon arein Ida Noyes Hall, rooms 303 and 304,1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois, 60637. Phone962-9555.Frank LubyEditor-in-chiefMichael ElliottNews EditorDavid LanchnerNews EditorRosemary Biinnfeatures and SpecialProjects Editor Thomas CoxAssociate News EditorPhil PollardPhotography EditorFrank ConnollyCopy EditorCraig FarberCopy Editor Dennis ChanskySports EditorWally DabrowskiProduction ManagerBruce KingGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising Manager Tina EllerbeeBusiness ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerLeslie RigbyChicago LiteraryReview EditorDavid SullivanChicago LiteraryReview EditorStaff: Karen Anderson, Scott Bernard, Mark Blocker, Anthony Cashman, AlexandraConroy, Arthur U. Ellis, Paul Flood, Ben Forest, John Gasiewski, Cliff Grammich,Keith Horvath, Jim Jozefowicz, Larry Kavanagh, A1 Knapp, John Kotz, MarciaLehmberg, Amy Leseraan, Jane Look, Mike Lotus, L.D. Lurvey, Helen Markey, Me¬lissa Mayer, Karin Nelson, Jim Pretlow, Ravi Rajmane, Matt Schaefer, GeoffSherry, Jeff Smith, Steve Sorensen, Rick Stabile, Hilary Till, Bob Travis, Terry Tro-janek, Julie WeissmanUS foreign policy out of touchBouchey/Bonner debate recap4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9,1984mer Nights, or the intense negotiations withthe administration resulting in the suc¬cessful acquisition of money for an autumnquarter semi-formal dance (money thatsubsequently had to be returned because thefinance committee would not cooperate tosupport the event)?Autumnerk, the Book Exchange, thetutor/volunteer program, the operation ofEx Libris canteen on Regenstein A Level,all are Student Government coordinatedand Student Government sponsored.Roundtable, Open University, Tabletalk, achild care center, another library canteen,plus other social and academic services areplanned for later this year. However, unlessthe current I-want-to-go-to-court syndromedesists, unless the dilatory chairmen of thevarious committees begin to assume re¬sponsibility, and unless more of us involveourselves to make things happen, none ofthe programs and activities on paper can orwill materialize.Those officers and representatives whocurrently hold seats must leave behind thesilly games and begin to work. They shouldrecall the purpose of Student Government:to meet in order to serve and provide. Andwe must remind them of those responsibili¬ties. They should be accountable to us; ifthey wish to highlight Student Governmenton their resumes, then let them show uswhat positive contributions they can make.Unless they are working for us, we have theright and the duty to request that they be re¬moved from office.The questions regarding the autumn elec¬tion must be quickly resolved and put torest. No one is trying to keep anyone awayfrom Student Government. Anyone maywork on a committee and everyone is enti¬tled to speak at Assembly meetings. In fact,we should all consider taking a seat in theAssembly or chairing a committee. Those of us who can plan and organize activitiesshould put those skills to work in StudentGovernment. Student Government needs ta¬lented and responsible individuals.Our university is only as good as we arewilling to make it. We are all challenged tospeak out and to work. Unless we do, wemay have to silently accept a Student Gov¬ernment that is indolent, inactive and inef¬fective.Tim WongFormer Vice PresidentStudent GovernmentLURVEY IS IN POOR TASTETo the editor:A lot of complaints have been lodged re¬cently against L.D. Lurvey and his satirecolumn. Opus DeGrog. L.D. has been critici¬zed for alleged sexism, racism, blurring ofnational types, and, in at least one unpub¬lished case, ignorance of the correct way toaddress royalty. However, these criticsseem to miss the one fatal (and consistent)flaw of Opus DeGrog.As comedians such as Richard Pryor,Lenny Bruce, and the Monty Python troupehave repeatedly shown, a humorist can beracist, sexist, or just plain offensive and hewill still be forgiven by anyone with a senseof humor (i.e., a humorist’s audience) if heis funny. All someone has to do to earn thetitle “humorist” is make people laugh —how he does that is immaterial to whetherthe deserves the title.It is this, of course, which is Opus De-Grog’s unforgiveable flaw: it simply isn’tfunny. I, for one, would be willing to over¬look any of the column’s peccadillos if it hadonce made me laugh.Arthur CohenCentral Americacontinued from page fourBouchey challenged Bonner’s figures forthe number of civilian deaths in El Salva¬dor. According to Bouchey, Bonner’s figureswere exaggerated and didn’t account for thefact that many were fatalities in combat sit¬uations. As for Duarte’s inability to presscharges, Bouchey quoted President Duarteas having said, ‘“Our court system onlyekes out justice to chicken thieves.’” The in¬adequacy of the courts in El Salvador is “areality with which we have to grapple ... buton the one hand, we don’t want kangaroocourts as an alternative to death squad, vigi¬lante-style justice. So 1 think that it is ratherover much to expect at this moment thatwe’re going to transform El Salvador... Ithink that it is far more advisable and usefulfor us to accentuate the positive and to en-couarge that which is positive because itseems to me that the alternative to workingwith those elements that are busily seekingto transform that country is what? It is sim¬ply to abandon them, to walk away and tohand them over to the Marxist-Leninists.”Bonner responded by saying the US hasnot encouraged but discouraged negotia¬tions in El Salvdor. He cited the case of Sal¬vadoran Archbishop Rivera y Dama who, in1981, gained support from the guerrilas andfrom Duarte, then the junta leader, to seekbacking for negotiations from Europe andthe US. He got backing from the Pope andseveral parliaments. “And then Rivera yDama came to the US and he met with VicePresident Bush and Judge Clark, numbertwo in the State Department at the time, andTom Enders ... And he was told unequivo¬cally, that the US was not interested in nego¬tiating. Duarte has pulled off these (recent)negotiations in spite of the opposition fromthe Reagan administration.”While the rebels were willing to negotiate,the military was not. “The guerillas havemade offers to negotiate since 1981. At leastsix times. And you can say they weren’t tobe trusted and they weren’t serious. At least let’s call their bluff.” He maintained thatthe Salvadoran government’s carpet bomb¬ings of rebel areas, and death squad activityled by military officers, meant that the mili¬tary was unwilling to negotiate. Bonner thendefended the Nicaraguan revolution with aState Department report about Soviet in¬volvement in Nicaragua. ‘“Soviet militaryaid to Nicaragua is unobstrusive and some¬times ephemeral. And the limited amount oftruly modern equipment acquired by theSandinistas came from Western Europe, notthe Eastern bloc.’” He then claimed we can¬not predict the Sandinistas’ political behav¬ior from the fact that they say they aregoing to establish a ‘socialist’ economy.“We should let the Sandinistas be Sandinis¬tas as long as they keep out offensive Sovietmilitary weapons and bases.”Throughout the debate Bouchey and Bon¬ner were in a stalemate about what formsdemocracy could and should take in CentralAmerica. Bonner stressed freedom fromright-wing terrorism and Bouchey empha¬sized the threat from the radical left.The speakers were asked what proposalsthey had for the Salvadoran and Nicaraguanconflicts. Bonner urged actively pursuingthe negotiations in El Salvador, ending thesecret war against Nicaragua, promotingthe Contadora efforts, encouraging Nicara¬gua to become a model for other poor coun¬tries and withdrawing troops and basesfrom Honduras. Bouchey criticized the Con¬tadora group for not having budget, admin¬istrative and inspection mechanisms andsaid the Organization of America Statesshould take some control of the Contadoraplan. The OAS could help demilitarize theregion and enforce its plan with a multina¬tional peace keeping force. He said CostaRica would be a preferable model in this re¬gard, as they have done without an armyuntil now. Bouchey did not say when UStroops and bases should be withdrawn fromHonduras. Other questions raised dealt withthe morality of U.S. involvement, the San¬dinistas’ liberal arms distribution to the Ni¬caraguans, the CIA manuals and the allegedintroduction of phosphorus bombs bv theUS.LISA FROSTPost-Baccalaureate Premedical RecruiterBRYN MAWR COLLEGEwill give an informal talk about the Post-Baccalaureate Program and 5-year PB/MD Programswith: Dartmouth Medical School, HahnemannUniversity School of Medicine, The Medical College ofPennsylvania, The University of Rochester School ofMedicine, and will meet with students interested inpursuing studies that will lead to an M.D. degree.Tuesday, November 13 at 10:30 a.m.FOR INFORMATION/LOCATION/APPOINTMENTSCaii: Career Planning Office If MARK LIQUORS 8 WINE SHOPPE«Vl2l4 East 53rd Street • In Kiabark Plata SALE ENOS 11/13/B4415-35556 PACK, 12 OZ. BUSQASSIC OAK, KGUUt, UGHTMICHELOB2/*5 BECK’S6-12 02. BOTTLES BUDWEISER24-12 oz. CANS OLD STYLE6-12 02. CANS3/* 10” $759 $*|99WINESgauaiseBORDEAUX RED, BORDEAUXWHITE, SAUVIGNON SEC 7so mi.LUTECHALAT CHABUS 7% mlMOUTON CADETROUGE * BLANC 750 mi.ITALIANBARBERA D’ASTl 1982 750 miRUFRNOCHIANTI CLASSICA 1982 750 miBUKA WMBOPZELLER SCHWARTZE KATZ 7S0 miUEBFRAUMILCH 750 miBERNKASTRERKURFURSTlAY 750 ml $3*9$579$499$3*9$3*9$1*9$349$2*9 NAPA SUN-1980CABERNET SAUVIGNON 750.FETZERRED TABLE WINE 750 miM. MARION-1982CABBtNET SAUVIGNON 750JUGSSETTLER'S CRH*VR4 ROSE 1.5 uthPETRI WINESROSE, CHABUS,RHINE, BURGUNDY 1.5 utbBUKAUEBFRAUMILCH 1.5 ut»BLUE NUNUEBFRAUMILCH S750 ml 3POI $7.99 M ‘ p’ —750 ml.SEAGRAM’S7 CROWN$499CANADIANCLUB$799750 ml.COINTREAULIQUEUR$1199■ ■ 375 ml. JACKDANIELS750 ml.$799DIMITRIVODKA1.75 LITER$759TANQUERAYGIN750 ml.$859 BACARDIRUM1.75 liter$10.99-1.30 SSn$949HENNESSEYCOGNAC750 ml.$] | 99CUTTY SARKSCOTCH750 ml.$399ffJHfjr8) COKE, DIET COKE,If TAB, SPRITE, S I 99\ DIET SPRITE 6-12 01 cans 1 Hours Mon -Thurs.. 80m-) om, Fri. &Sol , 80m-2om, Sunday, Noon-M»dn*ghtW# nwm m* to Unw* auarmliei endcamel pnn«ne tmri AM tote nwm not Km)We arcapt Vna. Mosmrchcrgt an) OnckiThe Chicago Literary ReviewFall Poetry Contest!$75 First Prize$25 Second Prizealong with publication of allwinning entries in the Autumn CLR.All entries should be submitted under apseudonym, with an attached index cardgiving the author’s real name, address,phone number and titles of the entries.All contributions, for the contest or for ourregular publication, may be dropped off inthe CLR box, Room 303, Ida NoyesHall, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago,60637, or mail them to that address.DEADLINE: November 28The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984—5CONTACTLENSESOUR REGULAR PRICE•30 day extendedwear lenses' or•Gas Permeable lensesONLY*59 95For a limited time onlyIntroductory offer for new patients onlyContact LensesUnlimitedE\ WSTON1721 SlimiiHn \>«- m.% row \2"><><* V < lurk >1. (,OU) COASTI (I.) I Y Ku*h M.1 \l ( nliir Kll»l). m!h»\M2-n h> • COMPLETEsingle visiondesigner glasses$3375For a limited time onlyContacts&SpecsUnlimitedGLASSES AT (H R(iOI 1) COAST LOCATION ONLY!10.71 V Kush Si. • '*12 CV l.S. \i V.tu l .til.it Hu-h Si*!i>iiii'iii I nu|u r t 1ORIENTAL CARPETSOPEN HOUSE AND SALESATURDAY-SUNDAY-MONDAYNOVEMBER 10-11-12 (3 days)12-5 P.M.M H »FOR ADDRESS OR INFORMATION CALL:288-0524(See our classified ad for more information) UNIVERSITY CAR XRENTAL5508 SO. LAKE PARK241-6200LATE MODEL DOMESTIC CARSSAFE FOR HIGHWAY DRIVINGAUTO TRANS - AIR COND. - RADIODAILY OR WEEKLY RATESWE RE #3!10% DISCOUNT WITH U of Cl. D.THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE BEDROOMS•Unfurnished end furnished•U. of C. Bus Stop•Free Pool Membership•Carpeting and Drapas Included•Secure Building - Emily's Dress Shop•University Subsidy for Students A Staff•Dallcatessen •Beauty Shop•Barbershop #T.J.'s Restaurant•Dentist •Volet ShopFREE PARKINGMr. K«U«r 752*38006—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984*November 9,1984 • 17th Yeari ALAN RUDOLPH'S VISIONCALIFORNIANPSYCHOSIS by Rachel SaltzHang on to your mise-en-seat kids, Auterism is alive,well, and more seminal than ever... Just when it seemedthat the American Cinema had been given up to soft-corethrills, high-budget sex and whackily human aliens, direc¬tors like Alan Rudolph, John Cassavetes, (and yes, JohnSayles), have iconoclastically shouted “basta sangue!”and offered us a cinema of purity. Sure these are still wildmovies about sex and violence and what happens whenthey explode together, but they achieve a purity of toneand style which owes more to personal vision than to themega-buck aesthetic. I might as well say it, these aregreat movies.Take the case of Alan Rudolph; formerly RobertAltman’s assistant director on films such as Nashville, hisown career started tenuously with the ill-receivedWelcome to L.A. (1977). While L.A. doesn’t quite work—itsepisodic structure, peculiar characters, and Altmanish ar¬tistry are plusses more than balanced by the pretentio-banal dialogue and lack of center—it’s nonetheless an in¬teresting and even experimental film. Rudolph came intohis own however, with his second movie that giddilyobsessive, noiresque tale of rejection and loveRemember My Name (1978). Featuring a wired per¬formance by Geraldine Chaplin, the splendid legs of TonyPerkins and an Alberta Hunter soundtrack, Remember MyName is assured, fluid and so strange that it opened andclosed to scattered critical acclaim and a public coldshoulder. Surfacing again this summer (it played at theBiograph, the Fine Arts and on campus) critics tookrenewed notice, and while not a blockbuster, it enjoyed arespectable run. But between 1978 and 1983, for whateverreasons, Rudolph made only one film, Roadie, of dubiousquality. It seemed that another nascent talent had beencrushed or merely lost in the Hollywood that had becomea refuge for crypto-adolescents George Lucas and StevenSpielberg.Disheartening? Wrong again, white man. Rudolph hasreturned demonstrating that Remember My Name was nofluke, and that Los Angeles can encompass more thanone kind of movie and moviemaker. His iatest film ChooseMe, currently playing at the Fine Arts, is unusual andelegant, a personal movie that is also state of the artcinema.For Choose Me Rudolph takes the intertwining-livesstructure of Welcome to L.A. and gives it the kind ofsubstance and neurotic daring that made Remember wellnigh a masterpiece. Genvieve Bujold plays Dr. NancyLove, an on-the-air sex counsellor, who naturally has oneor two problems with both real life communication andsex. Lesley Ann Warren is bar-owner, Eve, one of Dr.Love’s callers (and her new roommate, although neitherone realizes who the other is). Eve easily attracts men butdespairs of ever finding a lasting relationship. Mickey, theboy character, (Keith Carradine doing his whole SamShepard thing), is a drifter who claims to have been a spyin Russia as well as a Poetry professor at Yale. (Sure, butdoes he appear in Vanity Fair with Jessica Lange?)The characters meet, sleep together and get involved inthe kinds of situations we expect in romantic comedy.The difference is that these characters are strange, not inthe cuddly Neil Simon way, but in the padded cell way.Once again Rudolph has created quirkily psychotic peo¬ple (especially Dr. Love) who only intermittently hoveraround earth as we know it. Weird, weird, weird.Billed as a “serious comedy” Choose Me is actuallyquite funny—it’s almost French— but again the humorhas to do with subverting expectations (of character andgenre). Like Altman, who boasts of throwing away all hisbest lines (because of the famed overlapping dialoguetechnique), Rudolph’s interest lies in character and stylerather than in one-liners and easy laughs.In Choose Me style reigns supreme; Rudolph's camerais almost always in motion, tracking and panning, and thefluidity carries over to the transitions from scene toscene. This movement and the movement within eachscene give the film what Dave Kehr rightly calls a“choreographed quality.” Along with films likeScorcese’s New York, New York and Coppola’s One Fromthe Heart, Choose Me's raging art direction and styliza¬tion seem to incorporate video technology and thrills, andto expand the visual vocabulary of film. I laughed, I cried!The director’s hand is apparent everywhere in thismovie, from the intertwining of song and story (by the endof the film you’re in danger of liking Teddy Pendergrass’title tune) to the studied and theatrical acting. Like thegreat American cinematic hopes of the 70’s—Altman,Scorcese, Coppola, Bogdonavich, Mazursky—Rudolph ismaking movies that depending on your inclination, areeither wildly self-indulgent or personal and artful. Ichoose the latter, and Choose Me shows that Hollywoodis still a contender. Go. Enjoy. ♦DAVID 1MACAULAr'•Award-wvnrvvng awHkor if illust'ratc'r opCASTLE, CATHEDRAL.UNBUILDING.^CT—1,5:5W\LL AUTOGT^APN Wi5 v\ew \200k.Tme amazing braim3unday, Mom II-*, 1*3**WAITING FOR THE GIFT OF SOOND & VISION ?CHANGES ITS TUNE!Society Leap Chiblast Patterns:KenWissokerfiPatrick Moxey: ffiM®David Kiefer: VFRI-9N0V9 pm - 12.30am$2 satIDA N0YESB3RD FLOOR DAVID M. SCHNEIDED■A Critique of the Study of KinstHpMEDIA APfRDSOSAN FISHER■ Id Do No Harm: DES and theDilemmas of Modem MmficineS8NHIYMPB0KTH5757 S. UNIVERSITY 7524381MON-FRI 8:30-630 SATIOBO-SOO SUN1200S00I At Budaet 11 you're number one. II 10* on :NOW at Budget you can rent any size| car and save 10% off our already Low rates■ Budgetrent a car of Hyde Park For Reservations Icall: "493-7900 1II Ask about our greatunlimited mileageweekend rates! ,BudgetrentacarU»e your Sean credit card at authorizeddiatnbution centers in most Budget of¬fice* Check local office for rental re¬quirementsOfUr good through 11/30/84 II2—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALArtier than Reed, he's alwaysbeen interested in musical experi¬mentation as more of an end in it¬self. But, thanks to his rock and rollheart, this doesn’t make him anymore detached from his subjectmatter. One of four shows nextweek that you should see if youcan. Sun Nov 11 at the CabaretMetro. You must be 21 to enter549-0203.-FSThe Cure Their hit is "Let's Go toBed.' which is nice as far as thatkind of stuff goes, but I’m told theydon’t perform their hits in concert,and the song doesn't reveal any¬thing that suggests that kind of at¬titude is deserved 8 PM Fri Nov 9at the Bismarck Theater.666-6667 — FSKate and Anna McGarrigle French Ca¬nadian sisters who write very in¬telligent, witty and truly movingfolk-music. Like the better knownRoches, their lyrics constantlyrise above the uncomfortable andoften puerile sentimentality oftheir brethren, and their music it¬self never falls for an/ of the mid¬seventies folk cliches. A very origi¬nal duo. The second of the fourshows next week that you shouldsee if you can. 7:30 PM Sun Nov 11at the Park West. Tickets $14.50advance/$16.00 door. 929-5959 — colonial rule through the eyes of ayoung boy from the sticks newlyarrived in the city. The film re¬ceived excellent reviews when itwas released two years ago. SunNov 11 at 8 PM. DOC $2.Foreign Correspondent (Alfred Hitch¬cock, 1942) Joel McCrea. Nazis.American propaganda. Entertain¬ing. Dialogue by Robert Benchley.Overly long. Hitchcock. Sun Nov 11at 8:30 LSF $2D.O.A. (Rudolph Mate, 1950) Amurder victim must function as owndetective in this movie, makingD.O.A. unusually cynically, evenfor film noir. Frank Bigelow (Ed¬mund O Brien) is a CPA who falls illwhile on vacation, only to discoverthat he has been poisoned withiridium and has only a few days tolive. When Bigelow and his girl¬friend discover that he was poi¬soned while notarizing a drug ship¬ment. they track the killer to thesleazy Los Angeles waterfront.This Rudolph Mate film, which fea¬tures a frenetic chase through thecity, is one of the most intriguingas well as nightmarish noirs ever.Mon Nov 12 at 7:30. DOC $2.Desparate (Anthony Mann, 1953)Anthony Mean” Mann once againinvests his unmatchable vitalityand expressionistic prowess in thissimple story of a couple who arebeing blackmailed into confessingto a crime they did not commit.% Their bourgeois delusions of law;§ and order are shattered as they< try to hide not from the law butfrom the criminals who are responr'jj sible for the entire scheme. Vio-§ lence exists almost as a separateentity in this film and lends a rawimpact that is rarely seen in a Hol¬lywood film. Mon Nov 12 at 9:30.DOC $2.Eroticism In the Avant-Garde Shortfilms by Kenneth Anger. StanBrakhage, May Maya Deren, andothers Wed Nov 14 at 5:30 PM,' atthe Film Center of the School of theArt Institute. 443-3737.'raxis presents an evening of soundand vision featuring the musicalperformances of Society LeagueClub, Test Patterns, the turntablebricollage artistry of Ken Wisso-kerand Partrick Moxey, and thepaintings of David Kiefer. Origi¬nally scheduled to occur in Midwaystudios, please note that the loca¬tion has been changed to Ida NoyesHall, third floor. Friday at 9 p.m.$2 donation.DANCEniversary this year and a greatdeal more. Taylor as a choreo¬grapher seems to know exactlyhow dance can ‘‘speak” about life— its agonies, failures, joyjspandloves. Some of his works irre^amaz-ingly depressing, while others arethe most life affirming pieces ofart I have ever witnessed. Hisdancers are amazing and his choiceof music impeccable. The programconsists of Equinox, Runes and TheRite of Spring (The Rehearsal). SatNov 10 at 8; Sun Nov 11 at 3. Au¬ditorium Theatre, 60 E Congress.$4—$18.50. 922-2110. - BMlubbard Street Dance Company Thisimmensely popular Chicago com¬pany is continuing their run at theGoodman Theatre as part of theMerrill Lynch Dance Series.Through Nov 18. 200 Columbus Dr.$16—20. 443-3800. John Prine This native Chicagoan isprobably best described as acountry musician, singer?songwriter style. That may notsound very appealing, but Prine’scountry roots come from the bestBlue Ridge Mountain tradition,and his singer/songwriter style isharder than that of anyone elsewho could be labelled by thatname. In addition, in the past sev¬eral years Prine has been using arock band and writing rock musicpretty much like a natural. Whenhis first record, containing the nowclassic "Hello in There”, was re¬leased in 1970, his approach wasbitter, perhaps it could even becalled defeatist edging on nihilism.What that approach never preclud¬ed. however, was sensitivity andcompassion, both in the wonderfullyrics and melodies, and towardthe benighted subjects of his songs.Over the years he's pushed his vi¬sion so that at times it has seemedalmost cynical, but he’s alwaysheld off from pushing it over theedge — he never treats his subjectsdisparagingly or his audience con¬temptuously — at least not forlong. In the end, Prine may be a ro¬mantic, but he’s the darkest kindthere is. A truly gifted Midwesternmusician. The third of the fourshows next week that you shouldsee if you can. Thurs Nov 15 at thePark West. 929-5959 —FSLou Reed “There's not much on theradio today, but you can still gasee a movie or a play.” Or you cansee Lou Reed. Since 1978 this manhas released six studio albums,five of them are extraordinary,among the best released by anyartist in that period. In particular,the last three albums stand as atestament to this artist’s maturityand integrity. During the sixtiesLou Reed led the Velvet Under¬ground. an immensely inspiredgroup that is the only band fromthat decade which still is making adifference in the sound of musictoday. Nowadays, Reed is proba¬bly the only person in rock who hasconsistently proved that one canage and yet still make music that isvital to the medium. MuddyWaters and Miles Davis are onlytwo among the many who haveproved it for blues and jazz, butonly Lou Reed has been proving itfor rock and roll. In a short blurbthe depth of his vision, compassion,even of his ennui (which has beenpicked up by everyone from DavidBowie to Johnny Rotten) cannot besimply described. Technically, thisshow belongs in next week's calen¬dar, but the last time he was here(late September) he sold out aweek in advance. As of this writingthere are still tickets available forthis comfortable but distant the¬ater. This is a great windfall forChicago's Lou Reed fans, becausehe doesn't tour very often at all.The only show out of four goodones next week that you must notmiss. Sat Nov 17 at the HolidayStar Theater, Merreville, Indiana.Tickets around $15.00.734-7266.-FSNoontime Concert Series resumes thisweek with ■ a recital by PatriciaMorehead. Ms. Morehead will per¬form works by Britten. Maderno,Berio and Lomon for oboe, oboe John CaleTHEATREThe King and I Yul Brynner is back,bald head, crossed arms, and all, inthis revival of a musical that hasendured so many revivals that itwould seem more appropriatelyperformed in an intensive-careward than at the Arie CrownTheatre. For those of you who can tafford the hefty $20-and-upwardsticket price, try re-reading JaneEyre and imagining that it is all•takihg place in a Cantonese restau¬rant (Thai restaurants just aren’ttacky enough). Arie CrownTheatre, 2300 S. Lake Shore,791-6000. Tues-Sun at 8, $10-$22.50; Wed, Sat matinees at 2,$8-$18.50. Thru Dec. 2 — SPA Life Considered to be one of thebest plays running in Chicago rightnow. A Life is about impendingmortality, love, sex, and the Irishgovernment, as discussed by Des¬mond Drumm, a retired civil ser¬vant. The Body Politic Theatre,2261 N. Lincoln, 871-3000. Thurs-Fri at 7:30; Sat at 5:30 and 9; Sunat 2:30 and 7:30. Final month. $10-$14. Student discount vv/ I D.Much Ado About Nothing Final week¬end, kiddies, to get your yearlydose of Shakespeare. Don’t letyour friends find out that youhaven't seen it yet... CourtTheatre. 5535 S. Ellis. 753-4472.Fri, Sat at 8; Sun at 2:30, 7:30. $8-$13.Quartermaine’s Terms British play¬wright Simon Gray's story ofseven assorted geeks (do I sense aperking up of interest?) who teachEnglish to foreigners at a .smallCambridge school Opens Nov 14(To be reviewed next issue) North-light- Repertory Theatre, 2300Green Bay Rd, Evanston.869-7278. Tues-Fri at 8; Sat at5:00, 8:45; Sun at 3, 7:30. S9-S20.$2 discount w/ student ID. apid Enamel: The show repeatedlyrefers to the death of graffiti, butseems to suppose the new life of abroader,what is perhaps greater form, incalled graffiti art” (GCJ.10/19). At the Renaissance Society,fourth floor Cobb. Tue-Sat, 10-4. Sun12-4. FreeJean Dubuffet: Forty Years Of His Art:‘creativity’ — Dubuffet’s dangerousprivileging of the unconscious as thekey to creativity. Madness lightensthe man and gives him wings andvision. A rhetoricA which divides the world into irregu¬lars and homoiogizers and equates* madness with genius. To which Du¬buffet counters, the insane are nomore insane than the sane. ” (GCJ,10/19) At the Smart Gallery, 5550S. Greenwood. Tue-Sat, 10-4, Sun12-4. Free.The Hill Series: An American LandscapePaintings by James M.. Anderson,^ Guy T. Fisher and Douglas Van Dyke. ^ ‘ record an abandoned industrial sitein Blue Island, Illinois. At the HydePark Art Center, 1701 E 53rd aty*!?S| 324-5520.Sex-Specific: Photograhic Investigationsof Contemporary Sexuality by some ofthe most provocative photogra¬phers to make such an investigation:1 Harry Bowers, Sarah Charlesworth.opment rather Luke and friends Barbara Ciurej, Lindsay Lochman,are there only to act as vehicles to Robert Mapplethorpe. Jane Reganget the story from A to B The film, and Cindy Sherman. At the School ofis. I suppose, entertaining but on the Art Institute Superior Streetwhole rather pointless (even in the Gallery, 341 W. Superior,context of the other two films in 443-3703.the series.) Harrison Ford, Carrie Chicago Head 1984: Various represen-Fisher and Billy Dee Williams (as tations of the human head by Chica-the token black) star. Fri Nov 9 at go and area artists, including Anna7. 9:15 and 11:30 DOC $2 50 Horvath, Mike Loven. Cynde—BM Schauper, Risa Sekiguchi, and manyfitness For the Prosecution (Billy others. Closes Saturday, at Ran-Wiider, 1957) Tyrone Power, Mar- dolph Street Gallery, 765 N. Mil-lene Dietrich and Charles Laughton waukee. 666-7737star in this adaptation of an Hockney Paints The Stage: Controver-Agatha Christie story. Sat Nov 10 sial and diversely talented Englishat 7:30 and 10:00. LSF $2.50. artist David Hockney turns his handcarface (Brian DePalma, 1984) De- to set design, with novel results.Palma is a master of the new bru- Closes Sunday, at the Museum oftality in cinema (others include Contemporary Art, 237 E. Ontario,Martin Scorcese and Paul 280-2660.Schrader); arms cut off with chain Twentieth Century Drawings from thesaws, wom^n killed with power permanent collection. That doesn’tdrills and women slashed with mean you’ll ever see them again;razors. His camera lingers on such the show, which features works byscenes (with superb editing) as if Moore, Picasso. Gris. Balthus, Ma-he were making some major point. * tisse, Beckmann. Mondrian andDePalma seems to think that by M'fO. closes Sunday. At the Art In¬showing us explicit violence he is stitute, Michigan at Adams,pushing our noses into an uncom- 443-3625‘ortable reality Perhaps he is and The Loop Group: A music fheater ense-just don't see it. Rather his films mble. presenting such works as Hoseseem devoid of any critical or Music, Sermon, (a fundamentalistnoral basis on which he defends sermon read to tuba accompani-iis obsession with violence This1 ment) and Sonate (a tone poem byime out he focuses on Tony Mon- Kurt Schwitters). Friday and Satur-ana (Al Pacino), a Cuban refugree day at 6 p.m at the Randolph Streetvho rises up from the street into Gallery. 756 N Milwaukee $5, $4he ranks of the wealthy and cor- students. “upt Only for the strong of heart Stepping Out: The Social Circulation ofmd the comatose. Sat Nov 10 at 7 High Vleel Shoe Images Lecture bymd 10 DOC $2 50 —BM ‘ Chuck Kleinhan in the Sexuality ingar Cane Alley (Euzhan Palcy. Art and the Media series Monday383) Get iVi Mai unique in 1931 aI cju at the School of the Art Insti-he film details life under French lute, Colombus at Jackson FreeHubbard Street Dance Companyd amour and English horn. The con¬cert is Thursday, November 15 at12:15 p.m. in Goodspeed RecitalHall. Admission is f,ree.seminal sixties group the VelvetUnderground. If anything, Cale’sexpressive range even out¬stretches Reed’s — he’s mademusic that varies from the brazen¬ly romantic (“Pairs 1919”) to theviolently cathartic (“Fear”), but allof it has been equally convincing.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 1984—3BRUCE COCKBURN GIVES MORE FIRE THAN HE STEALSBy Rich ZimmermanBruce Who? My own personal surveys inthe past have been shown that if the UCcrowd is normal, 9 out of 10 will not be able toattach a personality to this rather strangelyspelled French Canadian name. But if at thispoint in time you are reading the GCJ inHutch, don’t nudge the person sitting next toyou eating their potato chips and drinkinggrapefruit soda and say, “Have you everheard of Bruce Cockburn,” without thefollowing vital information: It is pronouncedCoburn and not Cockburn. There. Now youare in the know.So who is he? Well first of all, he is nothinglike Cyndi Lauper that’s for sure. (If you aresaying “Who is Cyndi Lauper’’ then you aremy kind of person). In the space of ten mon¬ths cute lovable Cyndi has cl mbed fromnowhere to the top of the American popcharts. In the space of sixten years not-so-cute and sometimes irritating Bruce hasclimbed into the American top forty once andthat was six years ago. But in tne last decade,he received 8 Juno awards. Canada’s mosthighly sought after music award.Since 1968, Bruce Cockburn has put out asteady stream of albums, the most recent ofwhich is Stealing Fire. I know your next ques¬tion, “If he has made so many albums howcome nobody has ever heard of him?” I amworking on a theory that the Republicanshave something to do with it (his one top fortysong came during the Carter administration)but until my facts are lined up on that, let’sjust settle for another explanation. If you hadbeen at Park West on Friday or Saturdaynight and talked with some of the people go¬ing into the concert, you would have beenamazed at the diversity of the individualsentering. There were political activists,granola people (you know, the kind of peoplewho eat granola and wheat germ and look likethey ought to), secretaries, yuppies,students, and yes, even conservative Chris¬tians. This incredible diversity makes it verydifficult to build a mass movement of peoplerushing to the record stores as a herd oflobotomized cattle. If you were at the concert with me, youwould have seen an enigmatic individual walkonto the stage and stprt playing a bluestratocaster. The Bruce Cockburn who ap¬peared with a large silver triangular earring inhis right ear, an orange and white stripedmuffler around his neck, John Lennonglasses, and graying blond hair cut in a sortof punk style, is the same Bruce Cockburnwho started out playing pure but innovativefolk music in the late sixties. Since thosedays his look and sound have been continual¬ly evolving. But he has always retained hisown unique style, and has always dressedand spoken in such a way as to identifyhimself with the fringe of society, the forgot¬ten people who have little or no prayer.On Saturday night, he delivered a per¬formance with an excellence that reflectedhis long experience on stage. He played fif¬teen songs and then the audience was ableto persuade him to return for three songs asan encore, giving the impression that theywere determined to stay as long as themanagement of the Park West would allow.Of the 18 songs, 6 were from Stealing Fireand five were from The Trouble With Normal,his next most recent album. He dedicated thetitle cut from The Trouble With Normal to “lit¬tle Georgie Bush.” The remaining sevensongs were split between five earlier albumswith the surprise that there was only onesong from “Inner City Front" which was histhird most recent release. That one song,"And We Dance,” would have been omittedif the audience had not had the tenacity to ap¬plaud long enough to get a third encore.My biggest complaint with the concert wasthe way the sound was mixed. The bass drumwas a bit overpowering and it was difficult attimes to hear the lyrics to the songs. Absentwas the crisp and definite guitar-centeredsound that especially dominated the 1980release, “Humans.’’ Also, it was difficult tosit through the long piece of instrumentalwork on “Creation Dream” back to back withalong instrumental lead-in to “Lord Of TheStarfields.”The band was perfect. A more recent addi¬tion to his band is Chi Sharpe on percussion,another example of the care which goes into the performance of Cockburn music. Sharpesat surrounded by an abundance of percus¬sion instruments, most of which have namesthat are unknown to me. Throughout the con¬cert, he was constantly switching back andforth on these instruments, at times playingup to three at once. He added a distinctiveLatin flavor to the band. His most visible mo¬ment was during the song “CreationDream,” a duet featuring Sharpe on bongosand Cockburn on accoustic guitar, but I wasmost impressed when he played the recorderon “Hoop Dancer,” creating an interestingblend with Cockburn’s pinky flips.Hugh Marsh was, as usual, technicallyperfect and played his blue electric violinwith haunting emotion. He was especially im¬pressive on “Hoop Dancer,” playing a violinsolo with the aid of an echo. Marsh used theelectronic effect to create a one man duet go¬ing back and forth between the speakers.One disappointment was his thoroughlyuninspired and uninspiring solo on “GrimTravellers.” However, this was the first songof the night and Marsh warmed up as the con¬cert progressed.The concert was made even more en¬joyable by the fact that it was obviously notan ego trip for Cockburn. When any memberof the band was being featured, Cockburnwould either move to the side of the stage orelse move over near the particular member ofthe band. In both cases, his attention was fix¬ed on the performer and he became part ofthe audience. He obviously enjoyedshowcasing the talent of the band as much ormore than his own talent. After the concert,several of us talked with him and found outthat he has a very busy road schedule andhas been performing fairly constantly sinceJune. I asked him if he liked performing sooften. He responded, not unexpectedly, bysaying that he likes performing but that somany shows so close together makes forsome difficulties. He then talked about howmuch he enjoys performing for a large au¬dience. I got the definite impression that hereally loves performing for the chance itgives him for “making contact.” From wat¬ching him on stage, I felt as though I was inthe presence of a very shy man who ab¬ solutely loves people and would have prefer¬red to be singing his songs to three or sopeople at a time, with dialogue in between.But at the same time he wants to shout hismessage to the whole world and given thelimitations of time and space, is thrilled to beable to communicate to as many people aspossible. He sa n ’Candy Man’s Gone” likethe anxiou3 obarer of sober but potentiallyjoyous news.For the last five years, his “message” hasbeen overtly political with no apologies. Thesong that is getting the most attention fromhis latest release, “If I Had A Rocket Laun¬cher,” tells of his recent experiences whilevisiting a refugee camp for Guatemalans inMexico. Before performing the song, hespent a few minutes explaining some thingsrelating to the political situations inGuatemala, which included the story of avillage of 2500 inhabitants, mostly children,reduced to 450 in the space of about twoweeks by government murders. He stressedthat the song is not a call to arms but rather aexpression of his feelings in the face of bitteroppression. After the concert, he expressedconcern that people might come and hearabout injustice and hate, but never actuallydo anything to make the world any better.The feeling that comes at a politically radicalconcert might appease consciences ratherthan stimulate meaningful social change.In contrast to the somewhat depressing at¬mosphere created by descriptions of terror,the song “Joy Will Find A Way,” was pureelation. Cockburn’s smile quickly spread tothe crowd. His dancing white tennis shoescould be taken for nothing but joy.Cockburn writes songs about his life. Hemakes no attempt to force his views on us.He gently offers his songs as his own uniquelook at what occurs to his senses. One factorthat seasons his outlook is that he is a Chris¬tian. Although Jerry Falwell probably wouldnot agree, Cockbums’ songs reflect a Chris¬tian outlook on life. But he writes his ownlyrics, rarely if ever quoting from the Bible.His songs reflect his beliefs, taken into life,lived out, and then expressed from the heartof Bruce Cockburn. Consequently, he is rele¬vant and speaks directly to the heart.mi feel this way. We, arto the other fe¬minists we have met* do not took wLinda LovMws*, Mediyn MonetO* andall the other subject© ot jfcomooraphy aswilting accomplices hi die exploitationof women, Out rather as tragic vfcttm*.Their stories speak to ail ot us. We can¬not faff to sympathize with thesewomen, for only when people realizethat toe pornography industry causesthis sort of great personal suffering canany progress be made toward eliminat¬ing the exploitation of women. Intelli¬gent articles such as Scott’s encouragethe kind of dialogue necessary to bringabout equal relations between thesexes, and we welcome them.Oct. 26 GCJ. Although we share his en¬thusiasm for toe book, and appreciatehis insights, we want to respond to astatement he made about how feministsview women such as Marilyn Monroeand Linda Lovelace. He states: “Thetendency in feminist thought, 1 believe,Is to consider these women lightly, or todisregard them for their seeming acqui¬escence to phallocentric demands,” andfurther: “feminist readers... often failto sympathize with these women be¬cause they seemed willingly to panderto male domination, unaware that theydid this as a means of survival, in theabsence of alternatives.” We wish to Women's Union (Heather Blair, PamelaBleisch, Jennifer Cohen, Susan Koenigh,Kris Me Quwilliams and Emily Rosen¬berg), hi4—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1984-THE GREY CITY JOURNAL ANOTHER LETTER WITH A RESPONSETo the Editor:Maybe I'm overreacting, or overinter¬preting, but there’s something chilling andsad about the appearance of the term,“emotional pornography” in Friday s GCJ(11/2). That phrase showed up in SB’s(Stephanie Bacon ?) blurb on the movie,Splash. I guess it’s a new synonym for“love story”, at least at the University ofChicago: the Grey City, where love is to be(eared and hated.The fear: sure, I know what that’s like.The hate: that’s an enigma. Love is beyondideology, I thought. It’s not so bad onceyou get used to it — even for a disorientedyoung feminist with 20 years left on her“biological clock’’. Tick, tick, tick. My god,even dogs and cats need love. Young mon¬keys grow sickly and die in its absence. Sodo human beings — at least, in spirit.Isn’t that where Grey City Journal getsits name? From the greyness of a time andplace without love? A little “emotionalpornography” helps some of us to surviveit.Mark Huppert30 year old senior, B.S.C.D. jectifies women (or children, or men), mak¬ing them the objects of (usually male-oriented) fantasy. Pornography precludeslove, because it makes the individual intoa fiction, which has no relationship to real¬ity. In the cast of most pornography, andin the case of this movie, women are por¬trayed in role of submission, dependance,and emotional and intellectual infancy.These female role models are not a pas¬sive phenomenon which exist outside ourintellectual lives; rather, they erode theself-respect of every woman, and distortour expectations of our own potential.These relationship models warp every¬one's idea of what an ideal, balanced rela¬tionship, between equals, should be.Mr. Huppert, who accuses GCJ of fearingand hating love, actually does love agrave disservice by equating it with por¬nography. The Grey City, in trying tobreak away from these damaging rolemodels, and make our readership awareof this danger, shows a good deal morelove for the integrity and worth of everyindividual than Mr. Huppert does in hisclosing statement: “A little ‘emotionalpornography’ helps some of us to sur¬vive...”A little “emotional pornography’’ rep¬resents an Interactive tragedy that vic¬timizes) all women.(Stephanie Bacon replies: Perhaps Mr.Huppert feels disoriented by my feminism,but I do not. By the term “pornography”, Imean that material which exploits and oh-□ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □□□□□□ □ □ □ □□ □□□□□□ □ c ]I □□□□□n □□□□ □□□□□□ □ □COOLEY’SANSWER TO THELOTTERYREGISTRATION FOR WEEKLYDRAWING OF *100<x>GIFTCERTIFICATE EACH SATURDAYNOON IN STORENAMEADDRESS ZIPOFFICE PHONE HOME PHONEAGE 15 & UP DEPOSIT COUPON IN STORENEW ITEMS: NEW IMPORTSIRISH WOOLENS AND LINENS ...SWEATERS, HATS, RUGBY SHIRTS,SCARVES, TIES, LAP BLANKETS,NAPKINSWOOLEN RUGS HAND WOOVEN BYMEXICAN ZAPOTEE INDIANS‘MAMMA RO’ ITALIAN RED CERAMICSMON.-SAT. 10:00-6:00 P.M.SUNDAY 12:00-5:00 P.M.cooley* comar Inc.,5211 v harper court HChicago, minor* 6061S (312) 363 4477<; K E A T P I. A Y SLow-priced PreviewsOctober 6-10Sat/T\ies/Wed 8:00pmSunday 2:30 & 7:30pm Call 753-4472Visa/MC/AmexUC students only $4 withStudent Rush! Call for details <<h iM'AniivmiThe l niversity of Chicago55.45 South Hllis AwnucFinal week!Closes this Sunday! Jeff-Nominated! Bring In This Coupon And SaveServiceOptical50% OffFramesCtiooaa any styta from our anttra frama aatacBon including HaistonPierre Cardin and Yves St Lauren* Then tare 50% off the regular onceOtter good with this coupon and student / faculty identification whenordering a complete pair of prescription glasses only Broken glassesreplaced or repaired at no charge far oneyear. No other discounts applyMMneue Dial O-P-T-l-C-A-l for the office nearest you.Chicago • Countryside • Tmley Parti • Crystol take • Oak LawnDowners Grove • Vernon Hills • Mafteson • Vida Park • Morion GroveNorridge • Arlington Heights • North Riverside • Naperville • DeerfieldHomewood • Merrillville • Joliet • Rockford • St Charles • BeloitOffices throughout HHnoitOpen All Day Saturday ana Sunday Mall HoursProfessional Eya Elamination AvaRaMa eSu-eJThe Writerin Our WorldA SymposiumFriday, November 91:30-3:00 Political reality and imaginative writing: Terrence Des Pres,Caroline Forche, Leslie Epstein.3:30-5:00 Poetry and history; poetry and exile; poetry and race MichaelS. Harper, Derek Walcott, Stanislaw Baranczak.Saturday, November 101:30-3:00 Writing and war: Gloria Emerson, Ward Just, Robert Stone.3:30-5:00 The writer's work—the solitary and the social Grace Paley,C.K. Williams, Mary Lee Settle.7:30-9:30 Roundtable: All participants.Harris Hall 107, Northwestern University, Evanston campusFree and open to the public.Northwestern University1735 Benson AvenueEvanston, IL 60201(312) 492-3490a uniqueopportunityforMath/Science(Majors/Minors/Aptitudes)For you and for the world. Peace Corps will combineyour education with training to prepare you for avolunteer position in: • Education • Fisheries •Health • Agriculture • Forestry or other areas. You'llmeet new people, learn a new language, experiencea new culture and gain a whole new outlook Andwhile you're building your future, you'll be helpingpeople in developing countries learn the basics oftechnological advancement. The toughest jobyou'll ever loveInformation seminar Nov 12that 4om. in "evnolds ClubNorth Loumc. Interviews Nov13th, Career Counsel inn ?,Placement. if *THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 1984—5Explore Your Possibilityat Busch Gardens, TampaShowcase Your Talents in America's Favorite Fun PlaceBusch Gardens, Tampa could be the perfect showcase for your talents. We arecasting non-equity singers/dancers for a musical revue. Also, experienced BellyDancers. Plan to join us for:AUDITIONS AND INTERVIEWS' Saturday, November 10th,10 a.m. to 6 p.m.THE KNICKERBOCKER CHICAGO HOTEL163 East Walton PlaceChicago, IL 60611Auditions are limited to 5 minutes each and will be given on a first come basis.Singers must prepare 2 vocal selections, no accapella, accompanist will beprovided. Dancers should prepare a short selection to demonstrate their profi¬ciency and style. Belly Dancers must bring costumes, music and zills.Applicants must be at least 18 years of age and available for full-time employ¬ment in Tampa, Florida. Rehearsals will begin Monday, November 26, 1984For further information call: (813) 988-5171, Ext. 302.-BuschGardensTHE DARK CONTINENTTAMPA. FLORIDAAn Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H/VCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily 11 A.-8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062Yq.u'11 love the look of a HAIR PERFORMERS Perm and Hair Design. It's alook that's healthy and easy, to maintain It's a lootalone, making the most of your hair and your face$5.00 OFFCOMPLETE SHAPING AND50% OFF PERMSReg $30 $60 NOW $15-$3QOffers qood for first fine clients with designated designers onlySUN & FUNIN THE HEART OFFORT LAUDERDALE BEACHSPRING BREAK 1985.ifOCEAN HOLIDAY MOTEL205 N. Atlantic Blvd. (A1A)Ft. Lauderdale, FI. 33304(3051 763-3452Please send rates & Info, to: jI n • , ;, ' :; ;Persons ________ |Arris a, Depart. . j I rtVfLSeT06Ku.m.miiMiii.uiii.uin.u1i ROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPELMemorial SundayNov. 48:30 a.m.EcumenicalService ofHolyCommunion11:00 a.m.UniversityReligiousServiceRobinLovinAssociate Professor ofEthics and Society inthe Divinity School.12:15 P.M.Carillon Tourand Recital ER hG.W. OPTICIANS1519 E. 55thTel. 947-9335Eyes examined and Contact lenses fitted byregistered Optometrists.Specialists in Quality Eyewear atReasonable Prices.Lab on premises for fast service -frames replaced, lenses duplicatedand prescriptions filled.Student and SeniorCitizen Discounts Studios, 1 & 2 BedroomApartments AvailableSome Nice Lake ViewsGood LocationHeat IncludedParking AvailableCALLHERBERT REALTY684-23335 % Student Discounts9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.Monday thru Friday9:00 A.M.-2 P.M.SaturdayPREPARE FOR:ATW KAPLANEDUCATIONALCENTERTEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS S*CE 1938Call Days. Eves & WeekendsDIAL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 508-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650 ,- CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLAND PARK 433-74107LA GRANGE CENTER 352-5840i ;Permanent Ccnltfi iit More Than 12® Mator U S Cities 4 Abroad■ f onnformation about other centars^ OUTSIDE N Y STATE CALL TOLL FREE 800-223 1782In New York Slate Stanley HKaolan Educational Center LtdHOPEYOUUK6 IT,FRANKLondon School of Economicsand Political ScienceA chance to study and live in LondonJunior-year programs. Postgraduate Diplomas.One-Year Masters Degrees and ResearchOpportunities in the Social SciencesThe wide range of subjects includesAccounting and Finance • Actuarial Science •Anthropology • Business Studies • Economics •Econometrics • Economic History • EuropeanStudies • Geography • Government • IndustrialRelations • International History • InternationalRelations • Law • Management Science • OperationalResearch • Personnel Management • Philosophy •Population Studies • Politics • Regional and UrbanPlanning Studies • Sea-Use Policy • SocialAdministration • Social Planning in DevelopingCountries • Social Work • Sociology • SocialPsychology • Statistical and Mathematical Sciences •Systems Anaylsis •Application forma from:Admlaelons Registrar, L.S.E., Houghton Street,London WC2A 2AE, England, stating whetherundergraduate or poatgraduateand quoting Room 10.6—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALfulminate on the proper treatment of suchChristian infidels. A straightforward, sim¬ple story which receives a fittinglystraightforward musical setting from Mo¬zart: lots of strophic arias, some colora¬tura razzle-dazzle for the leading lady,fine comic duets, and a radiant second actfinale for the lovers’ reunion. There is alightness of texture in Abduction that isvery winning, as well as an admirablesense of economy and proportion: not onenumber wears out its welcome. There ishardly another opera so inherently pleas¬ing as Abduction from the Seraglio.And there is hardly another opera withso much obviously going for it that is asdifficult to stage as Abduction. The prob¬lem lies in the fact that much of the piece isrelatively static; this tends to make manydirectors nervous, and the result is thatthey overplay the comedy, at the expenseof the wit and elegance of the music. JohnDexter’s production at the Lyric mighthave occasionally strayed into broadercomedy than one feels is necessary, butthe opera’s basic integrity was never vio¬lated, and indeed that slight hint that atany moment the performance might go offthe rails added an exhilirating sense ofspontaniety to the proceedings. Thatbuoyancy was enhanced by the colorfulDisneyesque sets and costumes by JocelynHerbert on loan from the MetropolitanOpera. The cool blues of the harem wallswere particularly delicious, and the brightpurples and oranges of the Pasha’s en¬tourage offer plenty of eye-catching spec¬tacle.Happily, the quality of the music-makingwas on the same high level as the staging.Ferdinand Leitner conducted unobtrusive¬ly, in the best sense of the word: the musicflowed naturally and without mannerism.This is the best conducting we’ve heard atthe Lyric so far this season. Ruth Welting,better known here for her stratosphericcoloratura roles, offered a surprisinglywarm and rich soprano as Constanze. HerBelmonte, Mexican tenor Francisco Arai-za, sang well, but I find his basic soundrather uningratiating, lacking the final de¬gree of sweetness really necessary for thismusic.That being said, he nonetheless gave avery satisfying performance: he lookedgood, acted well, and sang intelligently, ifwith a curiously metallic timbre. Theopera’s second couple, the comic servantsPedrillo and Blonde, were well taken byDavid Gordon and Georgine Resick — goodsinging from both, but with a more adroitsense of comedy from her than from him:Resick’s scenes with Kurt Moll's Osminwere a delight. It was Moll who stole theshow with his incredibly resonant bass andhigh-octane comic acting. Moll's hilariouslynasty Osmin was all over the stage, andthere was nothing anyone could do to stophim; this is a no-holds-barred comic operaperformance, as well as the most compel¬ling reason to see this Abduction. ThisOsmin is destined for the h'Story books.During this current Mozart vogue, one isgrateful to the Lyric for giving him achance to speak for himself; works by gen¬iuses are generally a good deal betterthan works about them — and in the caseof the Abduction from the Seraglio andAmadeus, a good deal more fun as w«il.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1984—7by Michael KotzeMozart is currently very big, due inlarge part to the release of Amadeus, avery entertaining/ movie which numbersamong its characters one Wolfgang Ama¬deus Mozart, or “Wolfie” to his intimates.The movie, this fall’s most prestigious BigTheme outing, attempts to answer suchprofound questions as “What is this thingcalled genius?”, “Does somebody up therlike me?”, and “Why do fools fall in love?”It’s a fine movie, as far as costume melo¬dramas go, and all the great music doesn’thurt — but if you go to Amadeus lookingfor Mozart, sorry, 'cause you ain’t gonnafind him.If you’re looking for Mozart, you wouldhave been better off going to the CivicOpera House and seeing the Lyric Opera’sproduction of his comic opera, The Abduc¬tion from the Seraglio. It was a lot morefun than Amadeus, and probably offereddeeper insights into human nature thanthe pious blasphemies and big screen psy¬chological noodling of the movie. Writtenduring one of the happiest periods of Mo¬zart’s life, Abduction bubbles over with acharm and exuberance matched in no otheropera I can think of, even Mozart’s latermasterpieces. Carl Maria von Webert hitthe nail on the head when forty yearsafter the opera’s premiere, he wrote:I think I see in it what every manfeels about the happy years of hisyouth, a time of blossoming whichcan never be recaptured in the sameway, and where its shortcomings areremoved — irretrievable charmsalso vanish. After operas like Fi¬garo and Don Giovanni the worldwas entitled to expect others fromhim, but with the best will in theworld he could never write anotherSeduction.In Abduction, we see a young Mozartmoving towards artistic maturity; themany letters Mozart wrote at the time ofits composition show that he took the grea¬test pains over each musical and dramaticeffect. Mozart definitely struggled whilewriting this opera — compare this with theimpression we get from Amadeus, wheremusic seems to be delivered to Mozart inlittle bundles from heaven. Amadeus triv¬ializes the creative process, turning it intosomething mystical and removed from hu¬manity. Seeing Abduction, however, com¬pletely trashes this idea that Mozart camefrom another planet: this Abduction wastoo juicy, too full of big laughs, pretty girlsand catchy tunes to allow one ever againto take Amadeus' pontificating seriously.This opera is definitely the work of ahuman being. Amadeus would have us for¬get that; seeing this opera, there is no waywe can.The storybook plot concerns Belmonte, ayoung Spanish nobleman who sets out forTurkey in order to rescue his beloved Con¬stanze from the harem of the mightyPasha Selim. Watching over the Pasha’shousehold is the formidable Osmin, suspi¬cious of all, and who continually has tor¬ture on his mind. Of course, it all ends hap¬pily as the reunited lovers sail back toSpain thanks to the benevolence of thePasha and the frustrated Osmin is left toCHICAGO DIARYSEPTEMBER 28Sometimes I am walking along the broad stone path that leadsinto the courtyard of the great halls. The sky lies grey and somberover my head, while clouds lethargically sort themselves into pat¬terns of dark and darker. Rushing past me, people and faces:warm with happy expectations, others timid perhaps, and some¬times — they're just “there.” I feel cool air sliding along my neck,and if chills. I look to the side at the powerful limestone walls andI think. “This is not my home..” I walk onward. “These are not myfriends.” A litter further and all at once I feel that the whole as¬sortment of faces, sights, skies, air, weather, feelings, and evenmy own bed — these have nothing to do with me, or at least withwhat I thought was me, back home.I'm somewhere complete different. The sun that shined in Halo-ville. that cast warmth on ali my shifting and rustling about —doesn't shine here. My mother, with anger and love in her eyes,she is not here. Neither love, nor even the dull warmth of familiar¬ity seem to exist for me here. For a moment, I am shaken.STEFAN KERTESZARE THESE THE KIND OF PEOPLE YOUYOUViMn TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH?COME TO BRUNCHSUNDAY 1230 1642 EAST 56th ST No. 707NORTHBOUND ON I 89 THERE IS A CERTAIN POINT BEYONDWHICH THERE IS NO RETURN.THIS POINT HAS TO BE REACHED.FRANZ KAFKABrooke ShieldsThe ManDeer behind their break of sprucescluster densely one behind the other.Hiding fromthe guttural hackingof a cross-country truck hitching upfor the weigh station.Hooves sink in the spring gultchof the man-made gullybanked by the two slick roadways.They do not move.Thin bark peelslocked between stopped teethdangle.The nearest flicks its white-tufted earas my car crests the hilland fills the gap with tinny trembling.Southbound, the truck slews throughthe ponded rainfall,slows,shakes the wet skirt away.The driver’s vision clears,he’s happy no one is on 89to shoot his scheduleto hell.I turn off at Norwich.Slow and unsteady, heading for home,thankful I only grazed the right hind legof the lastglass-eyed deer.Thoughtless, clear, hungry.DAVID SULLIVAN NONE OF THESE PEOPLE HAVEEVER BEEN TO GREY CITY BRUNCHSOMETHINGNEW Hutch Commons SOMETHINGDIFFERENTAUTHENTIC KOREANBUFFET4:00 PM to 7:00 PMFeaturing:Bulgogi Backbahn (marinated beef)Bulgalbi Backbahn (marinated beef ribs)Doeji Bulgogi Backbahn (marinated pork)Jogiguyi Backbahn (red snapper)RiceKimchi (cabbage)NamulJapohae (transparent noodles)TeaONLY $4.00 per COMPLETE DINNERMORRY’Sin Hutch CommonsHOURS: M-F 7 AM-10 PM; SAT 9 AM-8:30 PM; SUN 11-8 For Complete Dental CareGeorge L. Walker, D.D.S. & Assoc.Courtesy Discount toStudents with I.D.— Open late Evenings —— Saturday until 5:00 —1623 E. 55th St.752-3832For AppointmentVisa, MasterCard, American Express acceptedWELCOME TO CHEEKING10% OFFwith your student I.D.Chinese StyleCantonese & SzechuanWe arrange parties.“Low prices, high quality.”Nov. through end of Jan. 1985Business Hours: Mon. thru Thur.12:30-10:00 p.m.Fri. 11:30-11:00 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 10:00-11:00 p.m.216 W. 22nd Place842-7777THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTSSONNYOKOSUNSSaturday, November 178:00 PM MANDEL HALLTickets on sale at the ReynoldsClub box office.Students with U of C I.D. — $5.00Non-Students —$10.00962-7300 VISA AND MASTERCARDACCEPTED rDR. M. R. MASLOVOfTOUmtST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100a Vnerur OporwcfiNEWPORT - ESTATE SALEThis North tower, one bedroomwith parking is a real buy. Pricedin the $40's.ELEGANT CHIPPEWAAPARTMENTS! This rare findof a convertible, two -threebedroom, two bath at 5050 S.East End is priced at only$45,000. Estate sale.SUPER U OF C CAMPUS CO¬OP. Large two bedroom withformal living room and diningroom. Completely and tastefullyrefurbished to today's standards.Mid 50’s. Bank financing.PERFECT FOR STUDENT orsingle. With $4,900 down thisone bedroom co-op with lakeviews can be yours. Monthlycost only $430 month.BARGAIN ON THE PARK.This modem one bedroom condoin an elev ator building is freshlypainted, carpeted and efficient.Very bright and sunny. Only$25,900. Owner anxious to sell.UNBELIEVABLE BARGAIN!Get off to a great start in this im¬peccable. maintenance-free, onebedroom condo. It’s the rightlocation, transportation at yourdoor, shopping nearby, and atthe right price, $36,900!!There's even a lake view!ROLL OUT OF BED and intoclass from this charming, freshlydecoratd four room con¬dominium. The oak floors havejust been refinished andeverything is clean as a whistle.This is a buy at $46,000!!1365 E 53rd StThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984—15-Apart l I entShopping?Choice Hyde Park Locations!Students & Professors welcome. Immediateoccupancy! For more information on anyapartment listed below, call Mr. Collina,Sack Realty Co.684-89005519 Everett4.0 rooms, heat, stove,refrigerator, and hot water, fur¬nished. $420.00/month Adultsonly.Keys in Sack office, or call Ledicat 643-2326 5100 Cornell1 bedroom apartments start at$380/month. Stove, refrigerator,heat, hot water, carpte, cookinggas and electric included. To seeapartment, go to the office inbuilding 9-5 M-F, 9-12 Saturday.OFF STREET PARKING5228 Cornell0utside-$30/mo.Garage-S60/mo.Call Mr. Collins atSack Realty1167 E. 52nd ST4.5 room, heat, stove,refrigerator, hot water furnished,425.00/month. Call Pete 363-0267^5136 Harper^4 room - 2 Bedroom off streetparking, newly decorated, mustsee. Call Mr. Collina 684-8900 5212 Cornell2.5 room and studio apartmentsavailable for immediate occupan¬cy, heat, hot water, electric, andcooking gas included in rent.Stove and refrigerator furnished.Rents start at $260/mo., adultsonly, no pets. Keys in Sack officeor after 5:30 p.m. at 5212 Cornellbuilding office. Wed.-Fri. 5:30p.m.-7:30 p.m. Saturday 12:30p.m.-2:30 p.m.5535 Everett4 room, 1 bedroom, living room, dining room and kit¬chen, heat,hot water, stove and refrigerator, furnished.$420/month, adults only.Keys in Sack office.5210 Drexel4.0 room heat, hot water, stove,refrigerator furnished.330.00 Portermonth 324-4956 (si5120 Harper2.5 room5285/month 3.5 room5380/monthStove, refrigerator, carpet, heatand hot water, furnished. Keys inSack office or call Mirko 288-4391The Sack Realty Company, Inc.1459 east hyde park boulevardChicago, illinois 60615 CHARMING VICTORIANAPictured in Jean Block’sHyde Park Houses this sevenroom rowhouse is perfect fora professional couple orsmall family. The backyardis maintenance-free and thebasement has an office with aseparate entrance.$112,500 Mrs. RidlonTHE ELEGANT JACKSON TOWERSChoice of Two14th Floor-four huge rooms.Views to Jackson Park andthe museum. Only $50,000.Barbara Holman10th floor-“C” unit (meansfantastic lake views). Threebedrooms, two baths. Sunnybreakfast area. Lots and lotsof storage.$94,000Gntui&nKENNEDY, RYAN, MONIGAL & ASSOC.5508 South Lake Park667-6666Put the pastin yourfuture!LIVE IN AN HISTORIC LANDMARKThoroughly renovated apartments offer the convenience ofcontemporary living space combined with all the best elementsof vintage design. Park and lakefront provide a natural settingfor affordable elegance with dramatic views.—All new kitchens and appliances —Community room—Wall to wall carpeting —Resident manager—Air conditioning —Round-the-clock security—Optional indoor or outdoor —Laundry facilities onparking each floor—Piccolo Mondo European gourmet food shop and cafeStudios, One, Two and Three Bedroom ApartmentsOne Bedroom from $545 - Two Bedroom from $755Rent includes Jttat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna1642East 56th SBwTtn Hyde Park, acnm the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metropiex, Inc.16—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984Women’s cross country attains its goals at conferenceThe girls’ cross country teamachieved one of its goals for the seasonlast weekend at the Midwest AthleticConference hosted by Lawrence Uni¬versity. The team placed fourth overallout of nine teams, missing third placeby only one point with a score of 83.Coach Wendy Sood commented thatthe team goal was to “use each meet asa stepping stone to learn and improvetimes.” The outcome of the conferencemeet was that the team proved its abil¬ity to run a strong consistent race, andto place well. The girls achieved bothgoals, placing three of its five teammefnbers in the top ten qualifying. Se¬nior Sara Dell astounded everyone with her second place finish in 20:48.The course was 5000 meters, partiallyuphill. The runners found themselvesbattling the 17 degree temperature.Sood attributes the weather to theslower times. The team performed bet¬ter at the Carthage meet on Oct. 20,where all five members ran much fas¬ter. Despite slower times at theLawrence Conference, the team ran itsbest meet ever. Senior Ann Reedplaced eighth with a time of 21:38, fol¬lowed by Sophmore Helen Markey inTenth place in 21:42. Freshmen KarinKenny and Maria Ponder followed upthe pack with 22nd and 49th place fin¬ishes. The team achieved its two goals atthe conference: they managed to runwith a good, strong, steady pacethroughout the race, and finish well.Sood commented that the team had setthe conference meet at Lawrence as itsmajor challenge for the season. Theseason has also proved successful forthe team in that the girls had a chanceto prove they had the ability to runagainst stiff competition, as they did inCarthage where Dell ran the 3 milecourse in 18:50, Reed in 20:02, Kenny in21:22, Ponder in 2205, and Markey in19:43. The times were unexpectedlylow since the stress was not so much onplacing well as it was at Lawrence. Due to cold weather and heavy winds,times were slower for all the runners.The team has also had to deal withinjuries and illness. The U of C inviteon Oct. 27 showed only three of the run¬ners. Dell ran in 19:23, Kenny in 21:03and Ponder in 23:49. This weekend’sregionals will be held in Rock Island,Illinois, and will wind the season up forthe team. Competition will be stiffer,and the weather colder. The girls arehoping for strong finishes, with Reedand Dell predicted as possible quali¬fiers nationally.<rMiracle in East RutherfordThe word is on the streetIf you Bear fans think that you’ve had it tough,pity the poor Giant fan. As of now the Giants sharethe lead for the NFC East title but this is the firsttime in my lifetime that the Giants have led theEast. In 1981 the fans had a glimpse of hope whenthe Giants made it into the playoffs. However, thepast few years have been dismal.This year the prospect did not look brighter. Therushing game had been pitiful and the once-domi-nant corps of linebackers had been pushed around.Their only bright spot had been the play of theoften-injured quarterback Phil Simms.The past two weeks the Giants pulled majorupsets over Washington and Dallas and appeared tobe ready to make a drive for the playoffs. The rush¬ing game, although not phenomenal, has gottensome clutch yardage and the linebackers have beenrejuvenated by the play of rookie Carl Banks. PhilSimms has gotten adequate protection, and he isusing all of his young receivers. Each game he hasconcentrated on a different receiver and so far thedefenses have not responded.Now the Giants face a relatively soft schedule ofgames against Tampa Bay, New Orleans andKansas City. If they can finish up with ten wins,they have a chance to take the divisional title basedon a better divisional record than Washington,Dallas or St. Louis.I’ve been critical of Bill Parcells in the past, but itseems that the only problem with the Giants hasbeen the absence of a healthy Phil Simms...Speaking of a healthly Phil Simms, it seems now'that Simms is doing well, the rest of the league’squarterbacks are going down with injuries. Lastweek Jim McMahon, Marc Wilson, David Humm,Danny White, Bill Kenney, and Steve Bartkowskiall got seriously banged up. In addition to thesequarterbacks, there is a long list of early seasonknock-outs which includes Jim Plunkett, JohnElway, Tommy Kramer, Archie Manning, EricHippie, Ken Anderson, Vince Ferragamo, Joe Fer¬guson, and David Woodley.The NFL officials have been criticized in the pastfor trying to put skirts on the quarterbacks. Well,maybe it’s time they got them a whole ensemble.Defenses have been blitzing more often, and the lin¬ebackers are too quick and strong for the linemen tohandle. Maybe it’s time for another rule changewhich will allow the offensive lineman to get awaywith some holding. This year the refs have beencracking down on the holding, and it might not bejust a coincidence that more QB’s are going downwith injuries...Now that Jim McMahon has done down, I hope tosee Mike Ditka eat some crow and re-sign backupquarterback Bob Avellini. This week John McKay resigned his post as headcoach of the Tampa Bay Bucaneers. He is the thirdcoach to down dowrn this year, joining Sam Rutig-liano and Ron Meyer. Look for Atlanta’s Dan Hen¬ning, Indianapolis’s Frank Kush, and Detroit’sMonte Clark to be next...I would not be surprised ifBum Phillips finally gives up the ghost in New Or¬leans. — CFOn deep background, here’s the word on thestreet.Chicago at RamsThe Bears’ Steve Fuller has not thrown the ball intwo years, and the Bear offense has not been able tocapitalize on any of its opportunities lately. TheBear defense has been tough, but they might havetrouble stopping league-leading rusher Eric Dick¬erson.The Rams are coming off a big win in St. Louiswhich kept them in the playoff picture. Jeff Kemphas been having a little trouble lately, and might bein deeper trouble if he cannot get away from theBears pass rush. Look for a defensive struggle, withboth teams having trouble putting points on thescoreboard. Take the Bears (+2).Colts at JetsFrank Kush had a promising club until he tookthem to Indiana. Although the Colt offense has putsome big numbers on the stat sheets they still can¬not even come close. The reason is that most oftheir offense comes when they are too far behindeven to cover the point spread. The Colts could mus¬ter only 10 points against San Diego’s last-rankeddefense. Also, their own defense gave up 38 points toa Charger team that didn't have Kellen Winslow.The Jets gave Miami a scare last week when theytook a fourth quarter lead over the Dolphins. RBFreeman McNeil should have a field day againstthe Colts, and receivers Wesley Walker and La mJones should have no problem finding a soft spot inthe Colt’s secondary. Take the Jets (-9).Minnesota and Greenbay at MilwaukeeMinnesota played well against Tampa last week,but they still gave up 24 points to one of the worstoffenses in the NFL. Late in the game Tampa al¬most moved at will against the Viking defense.Lynn Dickey should be able to take advantage ofthis fault.Had it not been for some tough early seasonlosses, the Packers would be chasing the Bearsright now. Last week the Packers put together awell-balanced attack to beat the Saints. Theypassed for over 200 yards and rushed for 166 more.The Vikes gave up 146 yards to James Wilder lastweek, so the Pack should be able to repeat their per¬formance this week. Take the Packers (-6*4). Pittsburgh at CincinnatiThe Steelers played great last week in a drivingrainstorm in Pittsburgh. Mark Malone to JohnStallworth looks like a dangerous combination. TheSteelers are 6-4, and looking for a playoff berth, andso will be fired up as they try to put more distancebetween themselves and the Bengals.The Bengals have finally settled on Ken Andersonas their QB, and even though they played wellagainst San Francisco, do not look for it to happenagain. The Bengals are too prone to the big play,and that is just what Malone will be looking for allafternoon. Take the Steelers (-1).Denver at San DiegoDenver relied on the pass last week and got awaywith it. This week they will do the same and getaway with it more frequently. The Chargers haveno defense and even John Elway’s erratic arm canhave a good day against the Chargers. The defenseshould put enough pressure on Dan Fouts to causeplenty of turnovers, which the Broncos will love.San Diego might decide to go with a more run-oriented offense at first, but they will soon find outthat the Broncos are better at stripping the ballfrom runners than intercepting passes. But whenthey pass, the Orange Crush will greet Fouts. It’sall circular. Take the Broncos (-1).The rest of the league.Buffalo ( + 13x/2) over New England.New England has not been able to play a full 60minues.Dallas (4-4) over St. Louis.The Cowboys have not been dogs by this much ina long time.Washington (-9) over Detroit.Detroit will try to beat the Skins’ secondary, andmight find themselves in a hole.Kansas City (-13^) over Houston.Houston is trying harder for a number one pickthan a victory.New Orleans ( + 1) over Atlanta.Moroski and Bartkow'ski are not interchange¬able.Miami (-14) over Philadephia.Did you ever see anyone as happy to tie Detroit asMarion Campbell?San Francisco (-6) over Cleveland.One TD is not much to the potent 49’er offense.Giants (-2^) over Tampa Bay.Steve DeBerg better watch out for the CrunchBunch.Last week: 6-7-0. —GCraig FarberGussiehyde Dark's‘IS piacfnloshinterestpublication D^MacPoint2issue J (on Mac computer communications) now at■ 57th Street Books, 1301 £ 57th■ UC Bookstore (Gen'l Books) 970 E 58th■ Seminary Coop Books, 5757 S University FlyarsBroadsidesHandbillslOO 4.50500 15.501000. . . 25.50* 11' BondFrom Your Camara Ready CopyVIVID COLORS AVAILABLECopyworks. u<tTHE COPY CENTER INHARPER COURT521C S. Harpoi • 285-2233MON. - FRI. 8:30 • 6:00 - SAT. 10 • 5The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984—17BLOOM COUNTY by Berke BreathedW'/YOUMMtmmmcuiwecmpaim, yov...yovsmPMOtjOtatUiL m/i/oim/wncs!..no me ms/..no me perns/Nmz// usm..voumPISTRAUGHT..monpale 151vo!CAN1 SAY JUSToneworp?JUST ONE.. HOf11AN0T ,usmnMPHPTFPH!PPPTWNO, IPO NOT THINK MSHOULP 1ST Mil THE CAT"ROT WITH TH6 RAJNEESHEES".1 THINK WE SHOULP _Rescue the ume «fellow. just mem him rightNOW... 5mm AROUNP INA RINKTUNtC.-BRAINWASHEP..CHANTING INCOMPREHENSIBLY. «. WRITINGCHBCK5 TOTHE "BHAGWANFROM OPRCAMPAIGNFUNP...\ 0s/(FORwe’ve gotto RescueTHAT POORMY.-mmM1—TELEPHONE\" HELLO.I "BHAGWAN 11 kameshm CULT■ center: UMM6TALK-w mmcar youccmicFMlTCMeS./f APVs THE BHAGWANSAYS "HE WHO6PBAK5 WITHWRATH FUB5AGAINST THEGATB5 OF BUSS T KNOW HE'STHBRe... YOUBUSSEP HIMUP WTTH TWOPOZEN W/N05LAST TVeSPAlA "THE SPARROWWHOM FLIPSAGAINST TH6WINP WillNeVFRSIPTHF N6CTAROF THe HOLYANOCAPO.'C1 NOW." 1WANT HIMON TH6 PHONENOW.” "MAYLOTUSBLOSSOMSANP BRICKSFALL UPONYOUR NOOPLEMAYYOURmiher...I %T\!—v LECTURE NOTESEvan Hadingham, British/Americanarcheologist and authorSunday, 2 p.m.Museum of Science and Industry's Lit¬tle TheaterHadingham will explain the .world ofancient skywatchers and astronimicalsites of early cultures, including thecites of Stonehenge and the Great Pyr¬amid. In addition, he will discuss newdevelopments in archeology and an¬thropology. The presentation is part ofthrel2th Annual Children’s ScienceBook Fair. The entire fair continuesuntil November 18.* * *Nancy Gabriela Carroll, an artistworking for Jewish/Christian under¬standingSunday, 10 a.m.Congregation Rodfei Zedek, 5200 HydePark Blvd.Mrs. Carroll, a participant in the“Breakfast with the Rabbi” series, willgive an “Update on Jerusalem.” Shehas visited Israel 17 times in the past 11years. She is a member of the Speak¬ers’ Bureau for the Consulate Generalof Israel, the Israel GovernmentTourist Office, and the American Jew¬ish Congress as well as serving on theNational Christian Leadership Confer¬ence for Israel. Mrs. Carroll hopes topromote better Jewish/Christian un¬derstanding through her writing, lec¬tures, and art.Martin Marty, Professor in the Divin¬ity School and the Department of Hu¬manities on History of CultureTuesday, 5:30 p.m.Field MuseumMarty will discuss the separation ofchurch and state in American Schools.Marty approaches the question ofwhether prayer should be incorporatedin public schools. He will also discussthe role the humanities play in bridgingthe gap between the different religiousand cultural traditions in the UnitedStates.MODEL CAMERA VIDEONew TitlesFriday, the 13th, theFinal ChapterMontegranoFirestarterAtomic CafeEducating RitaBreakin' Beat StreetNever Cry WolfThe Shop on Main StreetCarmenIce ManThe BountyRock & Roll, the Early DaysOh Dad, Poor DadLoves of a BlondHeartlandGorkyBritannia HospitalMoscow on the HudsonThe Long RidersScaifaceTank Lovers like UsHow I Won the WarYentlThe DresserAgainst All OddsSixteen CandlesCannonball Run IISreystoke1 FREE video taperental w/regularvideo tape rental.expires Nov. 23 withthis coupon only3 tapes for $10.00Friday*Monday Coming:BoleroThe Last StarfighterStreets of FireThe Empire Strikes BackPurple RainVHS ONLYNo free membershipat this timeModel Camera1342 E. 55th St.493-670018—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984 ABachelor’s DegreeisNot Enough!Many occupations require a graduate degree, itbroadens job opportunities, increases upwardmobility, adds flexibility. At the GRE/CGSChicago Forum on Graduate Education:• Explore full- or part-time graduate study.• Meet graduate deans and admissions officersfrom across the nation.• Attend workshops on financial aid, admis¬sions, graduate study in various disciplines,and test preparation.Saturday, November 10,1984Palmer House and Towers17 East Monroe street8:50 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Registration Fee: $3.00Sponsored by the Graduate Record Examinations Boardand the Council of Graduate Schools in the united States.5254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-020.0 APARTMENTSKM RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617E. 5MiSt.Spacious, newly-decorated 1 Vt, studios &1 bedroom apartmentsIn a quiet, well-maintained building.Immediate OccupancyBU8-5566SPACEStudios, one, two & 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA, U of C shuttle. Laundryfacilities, parking available, heat & water in¬cluded. 5% discounts available for students.Herbert Realty 684-23339-4:30 Mon. - Fri.52ND AND WOODLAWN2 Bedroom Apartment $5201 Bedroom Apartment $410Apartments remodeled with colors of your ;choice. Close to shopping and transportation.Close to university of Chicago. 5% discount to uof c students for limited time only. Please callfor particulars and private showing.Call Nancy or Steve at Parker-Holsman Com- :pany 493 2525Large 5 rm apt front porch tile bath showerreas. walk to U of C. Bright sunny Apt. 288-0718Beautiful Co-op Apt. On So. Shore Dr. 2 Bedr.Sunroom, Fireplace, Parking, $25,500 978-5528.TWO SPACES available December 15 orearlier in graduate student house. Low rent,ideal location near Regenstein. Call 955-2653.SUNNY 4 RM. APT. available Dec. 1 $485 incl.utilities. Sublet w/option to renew 9/85 bet.Blackstone & Dorchester on 53rd street. Call947 8558 SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.UNIVERSITY TYPING SERVICE : A fast, ac-curate, professional full-timeeditor/typist/word processor (and former col¬lege English prof) using the DisplaywriterSystem. James Bone 363-0522.512/hour.Moving and Hauling. Discount prices to staffand students from 512/hour with van, orhelpers for trucks free cartons delivered N/CPacking and Loading Services. Many otherservices. References Bill 493-9122.Passport photos while you wait. On Campus.Other photo services available. 962-6263.SPACE WANTED1 or 2 bdrm. apt to sublet 1-3 mos-flexible. Call947-8532 eve-962-9486 day. Ref avail.GARAGE space needed for winter. Garagelarge enough for midsize car and easy accessrequired. Please call 667-5581, ask for Peter.PEOPLE WANTEDPeople needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962-8859.THE NEW YORK TIMES seeks U of C studentto take charge of sales & distribution of paperon campus. Duties include sales, promotion,and daily delivery to dorms & offices. Commis¬sion, expenses & bonus plan. Call T800-63T2500(days) or 327-8774 (eves) to arrange for inter¬view.Secretary, 35 hr/wk„ good typing skills, abilityto read French or Italian. Salary range $7.04-10.40 hr. with benefits call 962-8509MANAGERProperty Manager needed for vintage buildingon Dorchester close to the University ofChicago. Two bedroom apartment, includingphone and utilities plus salary. Ideal for singleparent or married couple. Please call JoanPrendergast at 248-8300, or submit resume toIRMCO, 415 West Belmont, Chicago, IL 60657Temp, babysitter wanted for 2 girls ages 1 and4; Dec 10 until Jan 10 or 17 (except xmasweek). 8:15am-l :00pm M F in our home or allday in yours. Must have good refs. 955-2321.DRIVER wanted mid Dec to California. Refsreq. 684-2772.Healthy Young Men Needed for Donors inUniversity of Chicago Clinical Artificial In¬semination Program. Inquire in confidence at962-6124.LOUISVILLE. I need a ride to Lou. forThanksgiving. Will pay. Call Betsy 955-0315, 2-8736.Desk Attendent, part-Time 15-20 evening hoursper week as desk attendent for a Hyde Parkresidential building. Call 324-6100.New Singles magazine needs: Photographersand Cartoonists! Pays top $$$. SASE: Hi! Bx1920 Evanston, IL 60204. Sample copy of ourmag is75«,TRIO CON BRIO: Music for all occasions;weddings (in Bond Chapel or elsewhere),receptions parties. Classical and popular. 643-5007.MELLOW YELLOW is now hiring exp.energetic waitpeople. Full & Part Time. Youmust be available 2 weekdays from 1 lam. App¬ly 1508 E. 53rd St, M-F, 9-1 lam Rob orElizabeth.Babysitter wanted 8:30am-12:30pm MWF12:30-3:30 TTH in our home. Near U of C.Salary negotiable. Call 268-2025.PRECISION PLUS TYPING IBM Word Pro¬cessor Fast Accurate Service at ReasonableRates. 324-1660TYPIST Exp. Turabian PhD Masters thesesTerm papers Rough Drafts. 924-1152.TYPIST: exp/w student papers, reas. 684-6882PM.SO. SHORE TRUCKING MOVES. Truck withdriver, rates oy tne hour. 241-6132. CLASSIFIEDSFrom the “Roy Stryker U.S.A., 1943-1950” exhibit opening Dec. 15 at the Chicago Historical So¬ciety.Wedding Photography. Our photographyspeaks for itself. Make an appointment and seefor yourself. The Better Image. 643-6262PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE-U-WAIT ModelCamera 1342 E. 55th St. 493-6700LARRY'S MOVING SERVICE. RELIABLE,EFFICIENT Rates from $12/hour. Callanytime, 743-1353.FAST FRIENDLY TYPING-resumes, papers,all materials. Pick up & delivery. Call 924-4449.Editing—substantive or merely grammatical.Reasonable rates. Mark Sherman: 684-5443. For sale: Downhill SKISbest offer 643-1470.WHITE ELEPHANT SALE at Hyde ParkUnion Church, 56th and Woodlawn, Saturday,November 10, from 1 to 4. Coffee and treats,household items, plants, books, baked goods,some clothing. Sponsors: BPW Club of theChurch. Come in, browse, and snack.Beautiful wood desk/swivel-chair, $100, 288-1705Sears 12in. B/W TV. Excell. cond. $60. Also 30gal. aquarium & stand, $50. Call 947-9208.TYPIST-Exp. College Papers, Turabian-Fast,Accurate-reas. rates IBM correcting Selectric643-8606.WRITERS'WORKSHOP Plaza 2-8377Crossroads Saturday Night Dinner 5621Blackstone. 6:00pm, $3 for good food and goodfun.INTERSECTIONS, Poems and Translationsby Vinay Dharwadker. In English-from Hindiand Marathi Saturday, Nov. 10, 7:30 atCrossroads 684-6060. Great City Car! '78 Chevette, low miles, newtires, one driver $1000 or offer. 752-3807 or 752-0307.POETRY READINGPoetry reading by Alan Williamson, author ofPresence, Monday, Nov. 12. Wiebolst 408 at4:30. Sponsored by English Dept. Public in¬vited.MASSAGE EXCHANGEEUROPEAN ORIENTAL MASSAGE willteach if need to no exp reqd. no charge callSam 721-6971.READING GROUP on CENTRAL AMERICA.Planning meeting Tues Nov 13, 8:15pm, Cobb106. Bring ideas and suggestions.PETSOur small sociable funloving beagle needs ahome for several months due to cir¬cumstances. Food provided and compensation.288 3008.THEMEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4 pm call 667-7394.COME BRUNCH WITH USHillel has a brunch every Sunday 11 to lpm Lox8. Bagel, cream cheese plus N.Y. Times, Sun¬day Trib, coffee & Juice-All for $2.00.FOR THE PROFESSIONAL2 Story Brick Home 3 car garage elect allcarpeted full basement AC central many ex¬tras. Must sacrifice due to ill health. Backyards area 10 mins trom U of C 10% fixed rate.Call Joe Macacuso 581-4900 days 8-l0pm nites434 8234.GAY? LESBIAN?BISEXUAL?On Tuesday nights GALA hosts a Coming OutGroup, a warm and intimate place to talk forthose new to gay life (8:00), a general meeting,forum for gay and Lesbian issues (9:00) and asocial hour (10:00). 5615 Woodlawn.FOR SALESEALYFULLSIZESETEx-firm inner spring matt. & box, brand new,still wrapped, value $325. Sell for $95. 883-8881.Great Apartment sale Sat. Nov. 10. Fantasticselection of clothes, plus, books, records, toys,etc. 5633 S. Kenwood, #1A, 10am-5pm.PIANO-BABY GRAND, Smith & Barnes circa1915 rebuilt action, a great practice piano forstudent. $1350. Richard972-8677daytime.240Z-OLDY BUT GOODY,-71 Datsun, manymiles, some rust, still a classic. $999. Richard972-8677 daytime 643-9165 weekends.King-size FUTON with cover, pillows, andbolsters. Makes great sofa, bed, or both.Perfect for studio apt. Brand new. Paid $450.Asking $300 . 962 7688 (days), 288 4654 (even¬ings).79 Dodge Omni 4dr Auto A/c 45k mis goodcond. Best offer 324-1011 after 5pm. MOVIE CAMERASuper 8 & reg. 8 (used). Great Buy 69.95 on up.Model Camera 1342 E. 55 493-6700.FANTASY GAMER'SMEETINGOn NovlO The Fantasy Gamer's Club will holdits second meeting of the quarter. Place IdaNoyes Time: 12:00 Anyone interested in gam¬ing should come or contact Lawrence Lerner753-2233HAVE A PROBLEM?Don't know who to talk to? Try the U of CHotline—We're confidential and also have infoand referrals. Call us 7 days a week. 7am to7pm.MACINTOSH USER GROUPNotice: The Computation Center Newsletter isin error. The November meeting will be onNov. 20th at 5:30PM in Eckhart 133.A CLASSIC RESIDENCEIN ACLASSIC LOCATIONFIFTY-TWO HUNDREDSOUTH BLACKSTONETHE BLACKWOODLuxury’, high rise apartmentbuilding in the Hyde Park area nowoffering a limited selsction of oneand two bedroom apartments.Situated near the Illinois Central.University of Chicago, HarperCourt and only a short walk fromthe lake, our apartments feature cen¬tral air conditioning, individuallycontrolled heat, ceramic tile, securi¬ty intercom, new appliances andwall to wall carpeting. Onebedrooms from only $430, twobedrooms from *550. Ask about ourstudent and faculty discount.684-8666 KITTYSTILL NEEDS HOMEHome needed for affectionate, healthy youngmale cat. Black with white markings in all theright places. Longer-than-short hair andmagnificent tail. Rescued from the rain andcold but cannot keep. Call Kathy, 363-2828evenings and weekends, 322-0317 days.ORIENTAL CARPETSOPEN HOUSE AND SALEOur AUTUMN SALE will be held November 10-11-12 (Sat.-Sun.-Mon.) from 12 to 5p.m. It ineludes beautiful geometric design, vegetabledye carpets from villages in Turkey and Tibet.The wool is hand-spun and rich in texture; thecolors are pure and warm; the designs areclassic. Sizes vary from prayer rug to roomsize. These carpets rarely reach the States. Wealso have traditional large red Bokharas andRUNNERS; as well as fine tribal Afghan andfloral Kasmir rugs. As usual; our prices arereasonable for the exceptional quality. Pleasecall for our NEW ADDRESS; further information; or to set up an appt. for a more conve¬nient time. 288-0524.HEALTH/DIETTo purchase and/or become a distributor ofceritin products-including Dick Gregor'sBahamian Diet Drink Mix. Please contactJohn Dunham (312) 734-5824.SHELVINGAll types made from $15.00 free estimatesdelivery installation Call John 978-3723.MIDWEST PHILOSOPHYOF EDUCATIONSOCIETY ANNUALCONFERENCENOVEMBER 16-17 TO BE HELD AT THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 5835 S. KIM-BARK JUDD HALL AUDITORIUM 126THEME "EXCELLENCE AND/ORTECHNOLOGY IN EDUCATION"for information please contact ProfessorSophie Haroutunian, 962-3563.POLAND 1984On Wed. Nov. 14 at S.OOprn in Ida Noyes, PaulKloczowski, a Harris Fellow affiliated with theCommittee On Ideas and Methods, will speakon the topic "Poland 1984: An Orwellian Inter¬pretation" Refreshments. All invited. PASU.MABCONCERTMAB presents Afro-Pop star SONNYOCOSUNS Saturday November 17 at 8pm inMandel Hall. Students with UCID $5. Ticketson sale at Reynolds Club Today.LANGUAGE TABLESNative and Non-native Speakers meet to sharedinner and conversation 6pm, at the I-HouseCafeteria. Spanish-Monday evening, French-Tuesday, Japanese-Wednesday.THANKSGIVINGPROGRAMAll students Welcome! The InternationalHouse and Illinois families have arranged toshare the Thanksgiving Holidays with studentsNov. 21-25, Sign up at Programs Office.AEROBICIZEThere are still spaces left in the InternationalHouse Aerobics Class. Mon., Wed., Fri., 5:15 or6:15. Sigr, up at the Programs Office in the In¬ternational House.PUB CONCERTPete Baron Jazztett, Fri, Nov 9, 9:30-11:30.Members. 21 + .HYDE PARK’SNEWEST ADDRESSOFDISTINCTIONCORNELL PLACE5346 South CornellYou must see our tastefullyrenovated high-rise in EastHyde Park. This classicbuilding has the traditionalelegance of a distinguishedHyde Park residence, yet theclean, refreshed interior of anew building. Each spaciousapartment features amplecloset room, modem ap¬pliances, wall to wallcarpeting, ceramic tile, in¬dividually controlled heat andbeautiful views overlooking thelovely surroundings of the HydePark Community or the Lake.We offer studios and onebedroom units with varyingfloor plans starting at $325.Parking available. Ask aboutour student and facultydisount.667-8776The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 9, 1984—19THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOHN M. OLIN CENTERpresentsRobert Bork'★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★•A ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★!United States Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, District of Columbiaon*★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■a- ★★★★★*★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★RELIGION AND POLITICS★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ iTuesday, November 13,19844:00 p.m.Breasted HallOriental Institute1155 E. 58th StreetTHE VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEEpresentsROSALYN S. YALOWa Marjorie Kovler Fellow,speaking onRADIOACTIVITYIN THE SERVICE OF HUMANITY. . /Questions and Answers to Follow -TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13,4:00 P.M. Swift Hall, Third-Floor Lecture RoomA catalog of books specially selected for gift-givingUniversity of Chicago BookstoreGeneral Book Department970 East 58th StreetChicago, IL 60637phone (312) 962-7712 Non-Profit OrgUS PostagePAIDChicago. ILPermit No 9935Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some fewto be Chewed and digested.” Sir Francis Bacon■ihhmhhSTOOGEMANIA THE COLLECTED STORIESby Tom Hansen & OF COLETTEJeffrey Forrester Now available in paperback, thisStooge fans are fanatics—and this comprehensive collection—a best-book is the Stooge fanatic's seller in hardcover—contains oneheaven Articles, clippings and hundred stories, thirty-one appear-photos from the Stooges' day plus ing for the first time in English anda complete listing of hundreds of another twenty-nine newly trans-collectibles makes this the most lated for this volumecomplete resource available S9 95. paperS8 95. paper FARRAR. STRAUSS. GIROUXCONTEMPORARYTHE STORIES OF BREECETHE FABER BOOK OF PARODIES DJ PANCAKEedited by Simon Brett These stories transport us to theClassic parodists here demonstrate hills and hollows of West Virginiatheir skills at taking on the style of Life there is harsh—deadeningothers Their subjects include work, drinking, brawling, recklessChaucer. Herrick. Milton. Ted driving, wanton sex and killing ButHughes. Ed McBain and even men and women, bonded to a landWoody Allen In some unlikely they dream of escaping, endurepairings of parodists and authors. $6 95. paperNoel Coward disguises him self as HOLTEdith Sitwell and attacks himself,and Tom Stoppard takes on THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIEJohn LeCarre by Muriel Spark$9 95. paperFABER AND FABER First published in 1962. this is thewitty, appealing and suspensefulstory of a fiercely unorthodoxschool teacher and how- herattempts to shape the lives ofsix of her students lead to herown destruction$6 95. paperPLUMEFictionTHE STORIES OFTHE SOUND AND THE FURY BERNARD MALAMUDNew, Corrected Edition Malamud has chosen what heby William Faulkner considers his best stories, most ofThis is a new edition of the novel which are from his three previousmany believe to be Faulkner 's collections. The Magic Barrel. Idiotsgreatest work—the first corrected First and Rembrandt s Hat Two.version since the book was however, are published in bookoriginally published in 1929 Every form for the first timeeffort has been made to produce a S 7 95. papertext that conforms to Faulkner'sown "final intentions" for the PLUMEnovel THE TROLL GARDENSI7 95. cloth by Willa CatherRANDOM HOUSE These short stories are about artists,dreamers, people whose spiritualCHEKHOV THE EARLY STORIES aspirations throw them into conflict1883-1888 with the meager reality of theirThese stories selected from over lives, the sterility of their500 published before Chekhov background and environmentreached age 28 prefigure his S3 95, papermature work and provide a glimpseof his warm, exuberant, absurdist MERIDIANhumor as it ripens into a darker. CHILD OF GODmore melancholy irony by Cormac McCarthy$5 95. paper McCarthy writes of the crimes ofMACMILLAN Lester Ballard, a violent, dispos¬sessed man who haunts the hillTHE WAR OF THE END country in East Tennessee, preyingOF THE WORLD on the population with his strangeby Mario Vargas Llosa lusts "Were there darker provincesA modern historical novel set in of the night, he would have foundnineteenth-century Brazil, this book them "is the story of an apocalyptic S 7 50 papermovement which flares in the ECCOnortheastern part of the countryand. led by its mysterious prophet. THIS KIND OF WOMANestablishes Canudos. whose Ten stories by Japanese Womencitizens are prostitutes bandits. Writers, 1960-1976beggars and other outcasts Originally published between I960SI8 95, cloth and 1976 these stories representFARRAR STRAUSS. GIROUX not only a distillation of the finestfiction from postwar Japan, butSEVEN NIGHTS also a chronicle of the change inby Jorge Luis Borges status women have undergone inSeven Nights, a translation of some Japanese societyof Borges' public lectures in Buenos $8 95. paperAires in 1977 covers such topics asBuddhism, poetry, blindness, the WIDE VIEW/PERIGEEdivine comedy, nightmares. The THE COLLECTED STORIES OFThousand and One Nights and the DYLAN THOMASkabbalah For the first time, all of Thomas'sS14 00 paper stories have been < oiler ted into aNEW DIRECTIONS single volume Ihey range from (fir1dark, almost surrealistic tales ofI homas's youth (originally rejectedfor their "obscenity ") to gloriouscelebrations of lifeSI6 95. clothNEW DIRECTIONSSpecial InterestNew BooksiDOONESBURY DOSSIERTHE REAGAN YEARSby Gary TrudeauTrudeau's fourth major anthologyfocuses on the foibles and follies ofthe present administration both athome and abroad This volumemarks the timely election-yearreturn to syndication of one ofAmerica's most popular, and clearlyits most political, comic stripsS12 95. paperHOLT RINEHART WINSTONMAO'S HARVESTby Helen SiuFor the first time in the West, acollection of the stories, essays, andpoems of the writers of the "MaoGeneration " is available Thisvolume's selections appeared inprint during 1978 and 1981 duringthe brief period when Partycontrols on writers were relaxed$7 95. paperOXFORDCHARLES BRAGG ON THE LAWCHARLES BRAGG ON MEDICINEAll of your darkest suspicions aboutwhat those complex legal andmedical terms really mean will behilariously confirmed in thesedetailed cartoons by Charles Bragg$7 95 each, paperBALLANTINETHE BOOKLOVER'SBIRTHDAY BOOKThe dates of anniversaries, birth¬days, and other occasions can bestored in this unigue book featuringthe birthdays of over 1000 writers,a guotation for each day of theyear, and at least one illustration onevery spreadSI2 95. clothABRAMS SLUMGULLION STEWAN EDWARD ABBEY READERHere is a collection of Abbey'sworks and wisdom that havemade John Leonard of The NewYork Times comment "I have beenalong a few of Mr Abbey s roadsIndeed, reading him is oftenbetter than being there wasSI8 95. clothDUTTONTHE BELLS OF NAGASAKIby Takashi NagaiThis is the first English translation ofa best-selling Japanese account ofthe bombing of Nagasaki Writtenby a doctor who was both witnessand victim, the book is as timelytoday as it was in 1949 Nagai diedin 1951 from the aftereffects ofatomic radiationSI4 95. clothKODANSHAFRANKENSTEINby Mary Wollstonecraft Shelleyillustrated by Barry MoserThis new edition of Shelley's classicpresents the union of the dark sideof Moser's art with the originalparable of the lethal nature of thedenial of responsibility for one'sactionsS29 50. clothUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIATHE FABLES OF AESOPIllustrated by David LevineThe beloved Aesop is now avail¬able in paperback, illustrated by theman New York Times Magazinecalled "probably the greatestAmerican caricaturist" Translatedby Patrick and Justina Gregory,who reveal Aesop as dry. terse,wise-cracking, and funny$8 95. paperHARVARD COMMONTHE WRITER'S NOTEBOOKHere is a journal for writers in theperfect format each page featuresa guote from a writer, well-knownor not so well-known, with plentyof space for musings of one's own$4 95. paperRUNNING PRESSRAGE 2If you would understand your own age, read the works of fictionproduced in it. People in disguise speak freely” Arthur Helps■■■■■iRASCALby Sterling NorthBarely three weeks after its publica¬tion in 1963, Rascal had all fourpaws on the nation's bestseller listsA Newberry Honor Book, this storyof a lovable Wisconsin raccoon hascaptured hearts all over the world$10 95. clothDUTTONTHE LITTLE ENGINETHAT COULD, pop-upby Watty PiperThe classic of optimistic thinkingthat has delighted children for morethan fifty years comes to life in thisnew pop-up edition Full-color illus¬trations are animated with push-pull tabs to make the Engine aborn-again favorite$6 95. clothGROSSET & DUNLAPTHE MYSTERIES OFHARRIS BURDICKby Chris Van AllsburgUsing the premise that great illustra¬tion always tells a story. CaldecottMedal winner Chris Van Allsburghas created drawings that doindeed inspire one to invent a storyEach drawing is designed to makeviewers ask themselves wnat'sgoing on and what will happennext FROG AND TOAD TOGETHERby Arnold Lobe!Children continue to be delightedby the easy-to-read antics of theseamusing amphibians In this bookof the Frog and Toad series the twofriends tackle such problems ashow to stop eating too manycookies and how to handle abad dreamS2 95. paperHARPER ROWHAROLD AND THEPURPLE CRAYONby Crockett JohnsonFirst published in 1958, this story ofa boy bedtime and imaginationreveals the many adventures pos¬sible when one performs the s>mpleact of going to sleepSI 95. paperHARPER ROWI'LL MISS YOU, MR HOOPERby Norman StilesBig Bird's grown-up friends onSesame Street help him understandthe death of beloved Mr Hooper mthis reassuring book, based on thetelevision episode A useful note toparents by a child psychologist isappended$3 95. paperRANDOM HOUSEA BAD MANby Stanley ElkinLeo Feldman wages an hilariousand outrageous war to remain trueto himself and false to every otherman He’s the last fast gun in theWest, the sole surviving barbarian,the unconquered conquistador—aman fighting to stay bad1$9 95. paperOBELISKTHE PHILOSOPHER'S PUPILby Iris MurdochSet in an imaginary English spa. thisnovel tells of a pupil-teacherrelationship, the kind that lasts alifetime Innocence and the desirefor salvation and the exercise ofpower are the forces that animatethis complex workS5 95. paperPENGUINCOLLECTED STORIESby Gabriel Garcia MarquezThese 26 stories by the 1982 NobelLaureate are now collected in onevolume for the first time Theyexplore with a deceptive simplicitythe different faces of reality life andthe patterns of the humanconditionS16 95 clothHARPER ROWOVER BY THE RIVER ANDOTHER STORIESby William MaxwellThe ground covered in thesestories, most of which originallyappearedin The New Yorker is theMiddle West and New York theobservations keen and dead-on$ 7 95. paperGODINECATHEDRALby Raymond CarverThese 12 stories tell of lonelinessloss, the tragic banality of everydaylife and redemption The Washing¬ton Post calls Carver' a writerof astonishing compassion andhonesty his eye set only ondescribing and revealing the worldas he sees it"$4 95 paperVINTAGE PRIZE STORIES 1984THE O HENRY AWARDSAvailable in paperback for the firsttime this book features storiescoming from long-establishedwriters like Bernard Malamud. toyoung newcomers like DavidLeavitt, whose first published storywas written while he was still anundergraduate at Yale$8 95. paperDOUBLEDAYCEREMONY ANDOTHER STORIESby Weldon KeesMost of the 14 stories in this collec¬tion strongly reflect Kees'Midwestern background Spare instyle and neutral in tone, they arefinely tuned to the pursuit of every¬day life in the '30s and 40s$6 00 paperGRAY WOLFChildrenmmmaA HOUSE LIKE A LOTUSby Madeleine L’EngleIn this intricately structured novelL'Engle tells the story of PollyO Keefe a seventeen-year-old onher way to Cyprus Polly isbetrayed by a close friend and inthe process learns about idolatryand redemption$13 95 hardbackFARRAR STRAUS GIROUXBARE BEARby Jez AlboroughAny child who's struggled out ofsnowsuits and snowboots willlaugh in recognition at a friendlypolar bear grappling with hiswinter clothes From furry boots topolar underwear, the laughsmount as Mr Bear tugs off onegarment after another$4 95. clothKNOPF $14 95. clothHOUGHTON MIFFLINMOTHS & FATHERS,FEATHERS & MOTHERSby Lawrence M ShiesSt Louis author Lawrence Shies hascreated Squib, a little owl who can'thoot or fly. to show readers of allages about the importance offeelings and their expression It is acelebration of family life$4 95 paperHOUGHTON MIFFLINTHE PAIN & THE GREAT ONEby Judy BlumeIn this story of the eternal siblingbattle bestselling author JudyBlume presents an original, uproar¬ious and clear-eyed look at how abrother's and sister's gripe' abouteach other are nearly identical Kidsand parents alike will recognizethese two$10 95. clothBRADBURY PRESSSOMEONE SPECIALJUST LIKE YOUby Tncia BrownThe children at play in this photobook are handicapped—and, nomatter what their disability, theyclearly enjoy exploring life as muchas any kid This straightforwardmoving book shows children thatwe are all here to share life'sordinary and extraordinary gifts$11 95 clothHOLT RINEHART CDC!by William SteigA sequel to Steig's C D B1 CDOoffers a whole new volume of theauthor's drawings and captionscreated by playing with wordsmade out of letters Zena Suther¬land of the Saturday Review calls it"sheer chucklebait"$6 95. clothFARRAR STRAUSS. GIROUXIF I WERE IN CHARGEOF THE WORLDby Judith ViorstNow, from the author whosepicture books have delightedchildren and whose poetry hasdelighted adults her first collectionof poems for children and theirparents is at last available inpaperbackS3 95 paperALADDINJI never travel without my diary. One should always have somethingsensational to read in the train." Oscar WildeBelles LettresBiographyiALICE JAMES: A BIOGRAPHYby Jean StrousThe author has created here afascinating picture of a woman'splace" m a family of genius and inso doing throws a searching lighton the price a woman sometimespays when reared in such ahothouseS8 95. paperHOUGHTON-MIFFLINDIANE ARBUSby Patricia BosworthA riveting biography of thephotographer whose startlingportraits present us with many ofthe most haunting, most tellingimages of our time whose legacyattests not only to the power of hervision, but to the arduous life andcomplex mind behind itSI7 95. clothKNOPF PROUST: PORTRAIT OF A GENIUSby Andre MauroisThis luminous biography by anauthor of unusual distinction isgenerally agreed to be the bestsingle introduction to an under¬standing and appreciation ofProust's life and workS10 95 paperCARROLL & GRAFA VOICE THROUGH A CLOUDby Denton WelchA moving portrayal of the author'spassage through a nightmareworld of pain and illness, elevatedto greatness by artistic vision "It'sone of the most wonderful andterrifying books I've ever read amasterpiece"—Stephen SpenderS 7 95. paperOBELISKAXEL'S CASTLEby Edmund WilsonBeginning with the end of theRomantic era. Wilson traces theorigin of the Symbolist movementand its development in the work ofsix modern writers, who represent"the culmination of a self-conscious and very importantliterary movement"$6 95, paperNORTONTHE NAKED CIVIL SERVANTby Quentin CrispThis is an unusually riveting,exuberant autobiography of a manwho. in 1931, "came out" in thestreets of London as a self-confessed and self-evidenthomosexual In this book, one feelsthe strength and humor of anhonest man determined to face theworld with the truth about himselfS6 95 paperPLUMEINVISIBLE MANby Ralph EllisonRobert Penn Warren said of thisbook at its publication "It is themost powerful artistic representa¬tion we have of the Negro underdehumanizing conditions, and atthe same time a statement ofhuman triumph over theseconditions'S3 95. paperVINTAGETHE ROLE OF THE READERby Umberto EcoIn this collection of essays, theauthor sets forth a dialecticbetween open' and closed' texts,between a work of art that activelyinvolves the addressee' in itsproduction and one that holds the'addressee' at bay and seeks toevoke a limited, predeterminedresponseS10 95. paperINDIANA UNIVERSITY CHAUCER'S KNIGHTby Terry JonesIn a well-substantiated andimaginative study, the authorquestions the accepted view ofChaucer's Knight as a conven¬tional and rather dull pillar of theestablishment, and reveals "TheKnight 's Tale" as a sinister parody$9 95. paperMETHUENTHE LEDGE BETWEENTWO STREAMSby Ved MehtaThe author writes about thedecade 1940-1949 a crucial timeboth m his life and in the life of hisnative country India He recountsday-to-day joys and sorrows setagainst the distant thunder ofWorld War II and the waning lightof the British rajS17 50. clothNORTONBLACK LITERATURE &LITERARY THEORYedited by Henry Louis Gates, JrThis book is a collection of criticalessays that addresses the complexrelationship between contem¬porary literary theory and Africanand Afro-American literatures, liter¬atures not part of the traditionalliterary canonSll 95. paperMETHUEN PLEASURE OF RUINSby Rose MacaulayThe author summons pleasurableand melancholy emotions in herclassic study of the fascination ofruins, from Ampunas on the Gulf ofRozas to the broken abbeys ofEngland With 60 illustrations514 95. paperTHAMES & HUDSONMANHOODby Michel LeirisThis book, written in 1939. tracesthe author's sexual evolutionthrough the whole gamut of pre¬occupations that, in degree, botherevery man during his rites ofpassage into manhood Translatedby Richard HowardS8 00. paperNORTH POINTDISCLOSING THE PASTThe Autobiography ofMary LeakeyHere is a richly detailed autobiogra¬phy of one of the great anthropol¬ogists, archaeologists, and womenof our times She describes not onlythe amazing discoveries thatchanged the way we look atprehistory, but also her remarkablechildhood and her years with LouisLeakey in East Africa515 95. clothDOUBLEDAYBEN GURION PROPHET OF FIREby Dan KurzmanA definitive biography of Israel sfirst prime minister, the man mostinstrumental in the founding of thestate of Israel The book chroniclesthe creation of Israel as it provides aportrait of the life and times of thegreat ieaderS10 95 paperTOUCHSTONETHE INNOCENT EYEby Roger ShattuckThe writings contained herein,which deal primarily with thecontributions of French art andliterature to contemporary cultureare distinguished from most currentcriticism in that they place individual works and artists ahead oftheory and methodSI7 95. clothFARRAR, STRAUSTHE RESPONSIBILITY OF FORMSby Roland BarthesThese late essays of Barthes areconcerned with the visible and theaudible, rather than with literarytext Rewarding and intense, partlybecause Barthes himself was anartist and a musician they form asort of passionate True Confessionsof a very secret man516 95, clothFARRAR STRAUS MARIA MONTESSORIHER LIFE & WORKby E M StandingA great educational innovator,Montessori was also a warm andearthy human being, and bothsides of this remarkable woman arerevealed here by a close friend andco-worker$8 95, paperPLUMETHE LITERARY JOURNALISTSedited by Norman SimsA dazzling collection of thirteenpieces by the famous pioneers ofthe form, as well as new writerswhose work is frequently seen inmajor magazines With pieces byJohn McPhee. Tom Wolfe andothers, accompanied by exclusiveinterviewsS8 95. paperBALLANTINEBETWEEN OURSELVESLetters Between Mothers &Daughtersedited by Karen PayneA remarkable collection of lettersrevealing the concerns, accom¬plishments, resources and dreamsof mothers and daughters alikeover the past 200 years$8 95. paperHOUGHTON MIFFLINTHE WORLD, THE TEXT &THE CRITICby Edward W SaidWhile acknowledging such diverseinfluences as Marxism, psycho¬analysis and post-structuralism, theauthor proposes a criticism thatfosters flexibility of interpretationand a responsiveness to thecomplex affiliations that bind a textto the worldS / 95 paperHARVARDMIMESISby Eric AuerbachThis enduring work of literary crit¬ic ism was first published tfireedecades ago but remains mdispensible for both the literature spec lalistarid the informed amateur alikeThe author writes about the practic e and prcxess of narrative inwork, spanrnr j the ar v lent andmodern era,S 7 95. paperRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESSSELECTIONSThe man who does not read good books has no advantage over theman who can't read them." Mark TwainT S ELIOTby Peter AckroydThe first authoritative hiorjraphy ofthe most influential poet of thiscentury The author shows howEliot's search for order and hope inhis work mirrors the same quest inhis personal lifeS24 95. clothSIMONS SCHUSTERSTANDING FASTby Roy WilkinsThe story of the civil rightsmovement and the story of RoyWilkins are inextricably linked Inhis autobiography. Wilkins vividlyrecalls his life from his birth to thecareer that spanned the years fromJim Crow to affirmative actionS 7 95. paperPENGUINTHE PENGUIN BOOK OFCONTEMPORARY AMERICANESSAYSedited by Maureen HowardThe essay has long been a vital andimaginative force in Americanwriting This glittering and impor¬tant collection includes twenty-sixessays of every description bywriters from Russell Baker andJames Baldwin to Joan Didion.Stephen Jay Gould and LewisThomasSI9 95 clothVIKINGPLYMOUTH ROCK ANDTHE PILGRIMSby Mark TwainThis volume contains 8? speecheslectures, and other public utter¬ances chosen by Charles Neider onthe basis of their quality, humorand pathos The topics range fromcigars to the sms of the press, thescience of onanism and thehorrors of the German languageS17 95 clothHARPER & ROWPoetryiVIRGIL THE AENEIDtranslated by Robert FitzgeraldNot since Fitzgerald's now-classietranslation of the The Odvssevappeared some years ago has anytranslation been greeted with suchunanimous acclaim Fitzgeraldhas taken The Aeneid off the libraryshelf and placed this great poemwithin every reader s reach' -Christian Science MonitorS9 95. paperVINTAGEOTHERWISELast and First Poems ofEugenio Montaletranslated by Jonathan GalassiEugenio Montale was regarded asthe greatest Italian poet sinceLeopardi, and one of the greatestpoets of the 20th century Thisbook brings together workswritten in the '70s and 80s as wellas hitherto uncollected early verseS8 95 paperVINTAGETHE DETACHABLE MANby Donald FmkeiThe poet once again exhibits thewit and unique sensibility that haveinformed all bus previous work andmade him impossible to imitateS 7 95 paperATHENEUM FACT OF A DOORFRAMEby Adrienne RichThe poet's1 Fact of a Doorframe" isboth title and metaphor for hernew selection of material from nineprevious books, to which she addsfour eariy "lost" poems and someof the poems she is writing now$9 95. paperNORTONOBLIQUE PRAYERSby Denise LevertovOver the years, the poet's work hasmoved ever more deeply into therealm of meditation, while yetspeaking with the familiar voice of"the poet in the world " Thisnewest collection works towarda mature philosophy in equalharmony with public activismand private reflection$5 95 paperNEW DIRECTIONSWILLINGLYby Tess GallagherStanley Piumly says of this bookWillingly is what it says, here arepoems of giving, not giving up-poems of generosity and sharedlife For the art of that alone suchwriting is indispensableS6 00 paperGRAY WOLF PRESSSEPARATE NOTEBOOKSby Czeslaw MiloszA dual-language collection thatbrings together poems writtenduring and after World War II, aswell as more recent materialWhether he is writing about Parisin the 40s or Berkley in the '80sMilosz is honest and unflinchingS18 00, clothECCO PRESSMIRROR OF THE HEARTCollected Poems ofSarah TeasdaleA careful culling of the best work ofone of America's lyric voices, plus51 never-before-published poemswhich belie Teasdales reputationas a "hearts and flowers" poetess$14 95, clothMACMILLANSTATION ISLANDby Seamus HeaneyThe long narrative poem at thecenter of this book, an auto¬biographical quest concerned withthe growth of a poet's mind ispreceded by a section of richivmeditative lyrics, and leads into athird group of poems in which thepoet's voice is at one with thevoice of the legendary Sweeney,king of Ulster$11 95. clothFARRAR STRAUSINSIDE THE ONIONby Howard NemerovThis, the latest installment ofNemerov’s poetic engagementwith his world, is distinctive,decisive, and beautiful 60 newpoems from a winner of thePulitzer Prize for poetryS9 95. clothUNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO THE ROAD FROM HIROSHIMAby Marc KaminskyAn extraordinary volume of poetrybased on the testimony of survivorsof the Hiroshima bombing this is aunified sequence of poems inwhich those ordinary people stepforward to speak with dramaticintensity of their suffering andinsights$9 95 clothSIMON & SCHUSTERTHE SELECTED POETRY OFRAINER MARIA RILKEedited and translated byStephen MitchellW S Merwm said of this editionMitchell's translations bring thequalities that I most cherish in theoriginals into English with newintimacy and authority Rilke s voicecan be heard m Mr Mitchell'sversions more clearly than in anyothers"$ 7 95 paperVINTAGELinguisticsWriting iWORLD OF WORDS THEPERSONALITIES OF LANGUAGEby Gary JenningsThe author s delight in language issolidly based in scholarship, andthis book is a stylish and fascinatingguide to the world of words, theidiosyncrasies and eccentricities oflanguage from caveman to adman$ 7 95. paperATHENEUMERNEST HEMINGWAYON WRITINGedited by Larry W PhillipsThis collection of Hemingway'sbest remarks on the subject ofwriting—culled from letters andpublished works on the subject—isan inspiration for writers and a feastfor everyone who has enjoyedHemingway 's novels and stories$ 12 95 clothSCRIBNERHOW TO WRITE PLAIN ENGLISHThis handy inexpensive bookexamines the four components ofgood writing, reviews the impor¬tant points of writing sentences,paragraphs, essays, and longerpieces discusses the importance oftone or mood, and includes a list ofsuggestions for professionalwriting$5 95 paperMONARCH PRESSSELECTIONS A SHORT HISTORY OFTHE PRINTED WORDby Warren ChappellBack in print at last here is the bestoverview of the subject now avail¬able. conveying the evolution andimportance of the printed word$9 95GODINETHE STORY OF LANGUAGEby Mario PeiThe author's amazing breadth ofknowledge, sparkling with wit andanecdotes, has made this classicbook a continual delight tostudents, word buffs, and generalreaders since 1949S9 95 paperMERIDIANTHE WRITING BUSINESSby the editors of Poets & WritersFor the first time practical adviceformerly available only to theprofessional members of Poets &Writers has been gathered,updated and published for writerseverywhere A umoue and practi¬cal book covering every aspect ofthe writing businessS10 50. paperPUSHCART PRESSSEMIOTICS AND THEPHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGEby Umberto EcoThis book comprehends the entiretradition of the doctrine of signstreading its way through theallegorical readings of the Scrip¬tures the varying insights of philos¬ophy and rhetoric, and into thevarious positions of modern literarycriticism$25 00 clothINDIANA UNIVERSITYLANGUAGE & LEARNINGby Massimo Piartelli-PalmanniHere is a dramatic account ofthe first and only meeting of twotowering intellectual giants ofmodern thought Jean Piaget andNoam Chomsky For specialists andnonspeoaiists the issues discussedwill be a topic of debate for vearsto come$9 95 paperHARVARDWHEN WORDS LOSETHEIR MEANINGby James Boyd WhiteA wide-ranging and original inves¬tigation of how we claim meaningfor our experience and establishrelations with others in languagethis book examines the relationshipbetween <in individual mind and itslanguage and culture as well as thetextual communitv betweenwriter and audience$25 00 clothUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOA book is one of the few havens remaining where a man's mind canget both provocation and privacy." Edward P. Morganmmmmam—m—mPolitical ScienceCurrent EventsiTHE LIBERAL MIND IN ACONSERVATIVE AGEby Richard H PellsAn engrossing, comprehensivesurvey of American intellectualthought in the postwar years,summarizing the response of theAmerican intellectual communityto the sweeping changes broughton by World War II and itsaftermath$18 95, clothHARPER & ROWTHE ORIGINS OF THE CIVILRIGHTS MOVEMENTby Aldon MorrisHere for the first time is the dramaticstory of the real power behind themodern Civil Rights movement theefforts, skills, and organization offrequently overlooked black groupsand individuals across AmericaS19 95. clothFREE PRESSPOLITICS AND MONEYby Elizabeth DrewA shocking book that shows how'big money from organized interestsinfluences congressional behaviorand how private money still plays amajor role in presidential politicsS5 95. paperMACMILLANMAVERICK FIFTY YEARS OFINVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGby Fred J. CookMore than a behind-the-sceneslook at American journalism at itsfinest, this book is a soul-baringstory of a courageous reporter whohas been on the front lines of thenews for five fascinating decades$17 95. clothPUTNAM IN A DARK TIMEedited by Robert Jay Lifton &Nicholas HumphreyThis book, an anthology for thenuclear age. is about the insanity ofwar, picturing human beings attheir best and worse, as savagewarriors, helpless victims, as dupesof "Nukespeak" and finally asindividuals who have the courageto say no.$5 95. paperHARVARDINEVITABLE REVOLUTIONSby Walter LaFeberFrom Thomas Jefferson to RonaldReagan no pan of the world hasbeen more vital to the U S or lessunderstood by most Americansthan the five small countries ofCentral America Here is the tragichistory we were never taught andmust now learn$7 95. paperNORTONAMERICA'S HIDDEN SUCCESSby John E SchwarzA lucid, concise defense of the anti¬poverty and environmental policiesof the 1960s and 1970s whichattempts to put to rest the premisethat the government was respon¬sible through its programs for stran¬gling economic growth$5 95, paperNORTONTELEVISION MYTH &THE AMERICAN MINDby Hal HimmelstemIn this lively book, the authordiscusses a broad range of culturalissues which directly relate to thepervasive presence of television incontemporary society The book isorganized by genre, from commer¬cials to sitcoms and live events$10 95 paperPRAEGERPOLAND'S SELF-LIMITINGREVOLUTIONby Jadwiga StaniszkisThis book is not only an explana¬tion of the political dynamic thatled to the Polish "revolution" andthe birth of Solidarity in 1980 and1981, but an extremely importantanalysis of postwar East CentralEurope$25 00. clothPRINCETONPRESIDENTS AND THE PRESSTHE NIXON LEGACYby Joseph C SpearDrawing on personal experience,White House memoranda, newsreports, and interviews with mediainsiders, the author tells thefascinating story of how newsreaches—or doesn't reach—ournewspapers and televisions screens$19 95. clothMIT AMERICA'S WAR MACHINEby Tom GervasiThis third volume in the ' Arsenal ofDemocracy" series offers a chillingup-to-date look into the armory ofthe United States, this time with anew and comprehensive sectionon nuclear weapons$13 95. paperGROVETHE SIXTIES PAPERSedited by Judith Clavir-AlbertThis book offers its readers acomplete overview of influentialwritings from the social protestmovements of the 1960s, usingdocuments, speeches, and culturalartifacts unavailable until now$16 95. paperPRAEGER THE ISRAEL-ARAB READERedited by Walter Laqueur &Barry RubinFrom the first Zionist declarations tothe Lebanese War, this comprehen¬sive volume presents the speeches,letters, treaties, and reports of themajor participants in the MiddleEast conflict$7 95, paperPENGUINIMPLEMENTATIONby Jeffrey L. Pressman &Aaron WildavskyThree substantial new chaptersand a new preface in this thirdedition explore the relationshipbetween the evaluation ofprograms and the study of theirimplementationS 7 95. paperUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIAHOW DEMOCRACIES PERISHby Jean-Francois RevelThe author's powerful, bitinganalysis suggests that unless thedemocracies cease being 'compla¬cent victims' they may ceasealtogether The book, an accountof communist expansion fromWorld War II to the present, warnsthat democracies may perishbecause of the very qualities thatmake them so vibrantS16 95 clothDOUBLEDAYOUR MASTER'S VOICESby Max AtkinsonThis is a revealing and entertainingbook that demystifies the nature ofpolitical communication, revealingthat it is possible to identify anddescribe—and imitate—the meth¬ods politicians use to win theattention and approval of theiraudiences$9 95. paperMETHUENPAC POWERby Larry J SabatoThe author shows how politicalaction committees raise theirmoney and decide where to use it.explains why PACs are here tostay and what their effects will be,and offers pragmatic suggestionsfor reform$15 95. clothNORTONPUTTING UP WITHTHE RUSSIANSby Edward CrankshawFrom his vast output of writing onRussian affairs, the distinguishedRussian scholar has selected hisprincipal essays, articles, andreviews to offer an informed andprovocative insight into a nation itis essential we understand$17 95. clothVIKINGTHEY SHOOT WRITERS,DON'T THEY?edited by George ThemerA provocative anthology of articleson the role of the writer in societieswhere words can cost lives Theunforgettable and profoundlyoptimistic voices here form aremarkable testimony to our times,and to the need to defend thefreedom of the writer$6 95, paperFABERS FABER QUIET REVOLUTIONby Byron E. ShaferThis is the story of a revolutionwithout fanfare, a hidden strugglefor reform within the Democraticparty that produced a new era innational politics$29 95, clothRUSSELL SAGEWEAKNESS & DECEITby Raymond BonnerIn this book, the former Alew YorkTimes correspondent in El Salvadordocuments the compelling story ofa foreign policy disaster how theUS government manipulated factsto deceive the public about theevents and goals of our involve¬ment in El Salvador$16 95. clothTIMES BOOKSON DEMOCRACYby Joshua Cohen &Joel RogersEconomic turmoil UnemploymentBankruptcy Cuts in social welfareprograms Special interest groupsDecaying political parties Theauthors don't believe it has to bethis way and propose an alterna¬tive—democracy—that points theway toward a transformation ofAmerican societyS6 95. paperPENGUINSTATECRAFT AS SOULCRAFTby George F WillThe author's central thesis, thatAmerican society is rooted ineconomic self-interestedness andlaissez-faire individualism, is anindictment of contemporaryconservatism and liberalism alike$5 95. paperTOUCHSTONEHistoryiTHE FATEFUL ALLIANCEby George F KennanIn this study of Europe beforeWorld War I, the author drawsupon a lifetime of expertise todiscover how a Europe that waslooking forward to the future withstrength and confidence founditself embroiled in the horrors ofthe War to End All Wars$18 95. clothPANTHEONTHE UNCIVIL WARSIRELAND TODAYby Padratg O’MalleyAn updated, paperback edition ofthe compelling narrative that bringsthe longest conflict in modernWestern history into sharp anddramatic focus$9 95. paperHOUGHTON-MIFFLINTHE ARCHAEOLOGY OFMESOPOTAMIAby Seton LloydA revised edition of the bookthat first provided a synthesis ofall the conclusions derived fromthe discoveries in the "valley oftwin rivers," where the earliestexperiments were made in writing,mathematics and communityadministration$10 95. paperTHAMES & HUDSONThe oldest books are still onlyjust out to those who have not readthem." SamuelROANOKETHE ABANDONED COLONYby Karen Ordahl KuppermanIn lively and engaging style, theauthor brings historical themes tolife through fascinating portraits ofindividuals who lived the drama ofthe Lost Colony " of Roanokefrom Sir Walter Raleigh to Manteoand WinginaS12 50 paperROWAN & ALLENHELDTHE TIMETABLES OF HISTORYby Bernard GrunThis impressive volume gives a vastand consummate overview of theentire story of civilization through300 double-page spreads showingat a glance what was happeningsimultaneously from prehistory tothe present day in seven majorcategoriesSI5 95. paperTOUCHSTONETHE QUEST FOR ETERNITYby Charles T WoodThe author displays a rare capacityto make lively and immediate asubject—manners and morals inthe Medieval world—which can sooften be made to appear frustrat¬ing, dull and remote A masterfuleffort to get beyond the bare factsS 7 95 paperUNIVERSITY PRESS OFNEW ENGLANDFROM THE YAROSLAVSKYSTATION RUSSIA PERCEIVEDby Elizabeth PondThis classic study of Russiaand its people has been broughtcompletely up to date to includecurrent developments in the pol¬itics. leadership and society ofthe Soviet Union$8 95. paperUNIVERSEMY SOUL IS RESTEDby Howell RainesThe almost unfathomable courageand undying faith that propelledthe Civil Rights Movement are bril¬liantly captured in these movingpersonal recollections of the leadersand followers, supporters andopposition of the movement$6 95 paperPENGUIN THE PREHISTORY OF THEMEDITERRANEANby D H TrumpBefore 7000 BC men were navigat¬ing the waters of the Mediterra¬nean There remains no writtenrecord of what went on there inpre-classical times, and it is the jobof archaeology to piece togetherthe intricate and fascinating storyof the early peoplesS 7 95. paperYALETHE TWENTIETH CENTURYAN ALMANACgeneral editor, Robert H FerrellHere is a unigue. single-volumereference work that encompassesthe world-wide history of thiscentury, providing a panoramicview of the issues, the personalitiesthe progress and the tragedies thathave occurred since the epochalyear 1900$24 95. clothWORLD ALMANACPUBLICATIONSWHY LENIN? WHY STALIN?by Theodore H Von LaueUpdated to reflect current perspec¬tives, this penetrating studyportrays the emergence of Russiancommunism as an integral part ofEuropean and global history Thebook provides a chronologicaloutline of Russian history from the1890's through Stalin s first FiveYear PlanS8 00. paperLIPPINCOTTDOLLARS & DICTATORSby Tom BarryThis is the first comprehensivestudy of the power U S dollarswield over one of the most explo¬sive regions in the world today.Central America A wealth ofinsights into the economic andsocial conditions of the region$6 95 paperGROVE THE GODS & SYMBOLS OFANCIENT EGYPTby Manfred LurkerAncient Egyptian religion hasalways been a source of wonderand mystery in the West In thisencyclopedic guide to its gods andsymbols, puzzling and intriguingguestions about their interpretationand significance are answered innearly 300 entriesS9 95 paperTHAMES & HUDSONDEMOCRACY IN AMERICAby Alexis de TocguevilleThis volume contains the entiretwo volumes of Tocgueville'sclassic study in a completely newtranslation based on the secondrevised and corrected text of the1961 French edition by the distin¬guished scholar J P Mayer$10 95 paperANCHORTHE GREEK STONES SPEAKby Paul MacKendrickThis is a brilliant picture of theactivity of the renowned cer rerc. ofthe Hellenic worid period r oeriooworkinqs of rY)0derr - • ri^dtionsNORTONALMANAC OFAMERICAN HISTORYedited byArthur M Schlesinger, JrNow available m oapemack thispanoramic volume traces the storyof the American experience year byyear from the earliest explorers anasettlers to the latest policy state¬ment from the White House$10 95 paperPERIGEEVIETNAM & AMERICAby Marvin E GettlemanThis volume presents the firstcomplete history of the VietnamWar, as documented in essays byleading experts and in originalsource material—much of it neverbefore included in book form$8 95 paperGROVEEconomicsBusiness ■■■THE DECLINE & FALL OF THEAMERICAN AUTOMOBILEINDUSTRYby Brock YatesThis hard-hitting, authoritativebook explains just exactly whatwent wrong m Detroit whoseshare of the world's automobilesales dropped from 79 4 percent1950 to less than 30 percent in 1981$6 95. paperVINTAGEAPPLIED ECONOMICSPRIVATE & PUBLIC DECISIONSby Sisay Asefa. Ph DThis new book which features sixpapers by major economistsconcerning the importance andproper use of economic analysis inprivate and public decision making,centers on the application ofeconomic analysis in aspects ofhigher education, health care andother fields$8 50 paperIOWA STATE UNIVERSITY MEETING THECOMPETITIVE CHALLENGEby El wood S BuffaIn this dynamic look at Americanindustry, the author offers recom¬mendations for managers of• anufacturing operations whowant to meet the productivitychallenge of the 1980s. and setsforth six specific strategies$19 95. clothDOW JONES-IRWINTHE DEFICIT DILEMMAby Gregory B Mills &John L PalmerThis book part of the ChangingDomestic Priorities project of theUrban Institute examines the polit¬ical and economic predicamentposed by large federal deficits anddescribes how the federal budgetoutlook evolved under the Reaganadministration$6 95 paperURBAN INSTITUTE PRESSTHE VOICE OF THE POORby John Kenneth Galbraithn reverses me usual orderIN BANKS WE TRUSTby Penny Lernouxbanking community the prize-winning author unfolds a worid-'angmg story of corruption at thenighest levels of the bankingestablishment—from the Vatican tothe best known of Americanbanks$16 95 ciothANCHOR PRESSFUTURE OF THE AUTOMOBILEby Alan AltshulerA new shape for the worldautomobile industry emerges fromthis far-ranging study conducted byMIT's International AutomobileProgram It reveals a path ofdevelopment quite different fromthose widely forecast$16 95. clothMITWHY THINGS GO W'RONGThe Peter Principle Revisitedby Laurence J PeterThe author revisits the Peter Princi¬ple and shares his insights into howand why we escalate ourselves tolevels of unhappiness and distressand what we can do to bring asense of self-fulfillment to our livesw ithout the need for powermoney and status$12 95 clothMORROWTHE OFFICIAL MBA HANDBOOKOF GREAT BUSINESSQUOTATIONSby Jim Fisk & Robert BarronHere are 350 sayings epigramsobservations Zingers and truths onevery aspect of business, dividedinto categories from Success andFailure " to Bad Advice Taxes,"and "Women in Business"$5 95 paperFIRESIDESELECTIONSThe world could get along very well without literature; it could getalong even better without man” j ean-Paui Sanremm—mm—mm—mmPhilosophyiELBOW ROOMby Danie C. DennettAnyone who has wondered if freewill isjust an illusion will find thisbook an absorbing discussion of anendlessly fascinating subject Theauthor asserts that we can havefree will and science too. that wecan be moved by reason withoutbeing exempt from physicalcausation$8 95. paperMITDEEP ECOLOGYby Bill Devall &George SessionsThe authors assert that the refor¬mist movement in ecology falls farshort of addressing the realchallenges of the preservation ofthe environment and advocate aradical change in our understand¬ing and actions relating to thenatural worldS15 95. dothGIBBS M SMITHLUTOPIAN THOUGHT IN THEWESTERN WORLDby Frank E Manuel &Fritzie P ManuelThe A/ew York Times Book Reviewsaid of this book when it waspublished "This spectaculartreatise on utopianism is a workof monumental scope, writtenwith authority, wit. and unfailinglucidity"SI2 95. paperHARVARDTHE STANDARD DICTIONARYOF PHILOSOPHYedited by Dagobert D RunesA new and updated edition of thestandard reference work in philos¬ophy. incorporating the entire textof the original 1942 edition, butadding material on Buber. Rand.Sartre, Trilling, and othersS24 95. clothPHILOSOPHICAL LIBRARYTHE VIEW FROM AFARby Claude Levi-StraussThis long-awaited volume reflectsboth the cultural distance theanthropologist holds from hissubject, and the author's temporaldistance in casting his mind overhis main ideas, their antecedents,and their descendantsS27 50. clothBASIC THE MIND OF CLOVEREssays in Zen Buddhist Ethicsby Robert AitkenIn this guide, the author addressesthe world beyond meditation,confronting issues of appropriateaction, personal and social, asgrounded in Zen philosophyS10 00. paperNORTH POINTAFTER VIRTUREby Alasdair MacIntyreTaking into account the dialoguegenerated by this acclaimed booksince its publication in 1981. theauthor in a new chapter elaborateshis position on the relationship ofphilosophy to history, the virtues ofrelativism, and the relationship ofmoral philosophy to theologyS8 95 paperNOTRE DAMEHANNAH ARENDTFOR LOVE OF THE WORLDby Elisabeth Young-BurehlIn this scholarly work, the authordramatically portrays one of themost prominent and controversialpolitical philosophers of our timeThe wealth of quotation, descrip¬tion. and explanation creates anintimate, powerful picture ofArendt. her work, and her worldS14 95. paperYALESIX GREAT IDEASby Mortimer J. AdlerIn considering the six great ideas ofthis book—truth, goodness, andbeauty (the ideas we judge by) andliberty, equality, and justice (theideas we act on)—the authordispels the myth that philosophy isthe exclusive province of thespecialist$5 95, paperCOLLIERPHILOSOPHY & THE MIRROROF NATUREby Richard RortyThe mind has been compared to amirror that reflects reality In aprobing and wide-ranging critiqueof this imagery the author surveysits effects on philosophy, partic¬ularly on modern analytic thoughtS 7 95. paperPRINCETONReligion iA JEW TODAYby Elie WieseiIn this powerful collection ofessays, open letters and diaryentries, the renowned authoraddresses himself to the questionof what it means to be a Jewtoday—in America, in Europe,in IsraelS3 95. paperVINTAGESEXISM & GOD TALKby Rosemary Radford RuetherIn her most impressive work todate, the author presents the firstsystematic critique of Christiantheology from a feminist view¬point Through a bold synthesis ofpolitical, spiritual, personal andintellectual perspectives, she pointsthe way to a fuller vision ofhumanity and faithS9 95. paperBEACON PRESS THE SECRET TEACHINGSOF JESUSFour Gnostic Gospelstranslated by Marvin W MeyerThis is the first translation for ageneral audience of four of themost beautiful and startlingGnostic gospels These manu¬scripts have radically revised ournotions of the theological andpolitical struggles and structures ofthe early Christian churchS16 95. clothRANDOM HOUSETHE OLD TESTAMENTPSEUDEPIGRAPHA,Volume 2edited by James H CharlesworthAs in the first volume, which waspublished to universal acclaim, thedocuments in this book are newlytranslated from authoritative textswith introduction and critical notesby an international team ofscholarsS35 00. clothDOUBLEDAYTHE FIRST URBAN CHRISTIANSby Wayne A MeeksIn this absorbing and authoritativebook, the author analyzes the earl¬iest extant documents of Chris¬tianity—the letters of Paul—todescribe the tensions and texture oflife of the first urban ChristiansS8 95. paperYALEScience iSYMPATHETIC VIBRATIONSby K . C. ColeCole explains in a thoughtful.nontechnical way how physicspervades all aspects of our every¬day lives, and how physicsnaturally carries over into art.culture, philosophy and humanfeelingsS15 95. clothMORROWIN SEARCH OFSCHRODINGER’S CATby John GribbinGerman scientist ErwinSchrodinger's experiment involvinga "cat" showed that in thequantum world, everyday physicsno longer worked Now Gribbintakes the reader on an amazingsearch for the mythical cat throughthis mysterious worldS7 95. paperBANTAM ON CHEMISTRYby Isaac AsimovAsimov spans the major areas ofchemistry, describing the lives ofthe greats who made major discov¬eries in the field Updated andenriched with 28 new photos, thiscollection is for everyone whowants to have fun while learning55 50. paperDOUBLEDAYRECOMBINANT DNA:A SHORT COURSEby James Watson, John Tooze &David KurtzAn up-to-the-minute overview ofrecombinant DNA genetics, thisbook was written by NobelLaureate James Watson and hiscolleagues It summarizes thehistory of the recombinant DNArevolution and surveys recenttechniques in recombinantmolecular geneticsSI7 95. paperSCIENTIFIC AMERICANTHE TAO OF PHYSICSby Fntjof CapraThis revised edition has beenupdated with results from the latestresearch in subatomic physics Anew preface details the accelerat¬ing meeting of East and West incurrent social trends as well asthe sciences$7 95. paperNEW SCIENCETHE YOUNGEST SCIENCEby Lewis ThomasIn this enlightening personalmemoir, the author looks backupon his own experiences as amedical student, young doctor andsenior researcher to present afascinating view of what medicineonce was and what it has become—a young science rich in possibilityand promise56 95. paperBANTAMTHE DANCING WU LI MASTERSby Gary ZukavThe bible for those who are curiousabout the mind-expanding discov¬eries of advanced physics, but whohave no scientific backgroundZukav writes in beautifully clearlanguage, opening our minds tothe exciting new theories nowunfoldingS3 95. paperBANTAMSELECTIONSOrdinary people know little of the time and effort it takes to learn to readI have been eighty years at it, and have not reached my goal.” GoetheiQUARKS: THE STUFF OF MATTERby Harald FritzschFr/tzsch draws on new research toprovide the general reader with thefirst authoritative account of howphysicists today look at thesubnuclear world Writing simply,he describes what physicists havelearned recently about quarks aswell as other atomic matter$19 00, clothBASICUNDERSTANDING RELATIVITYby Stanley GoldbergMaintaining that important scien¬tific concepts can be discussed inordinary language. Goldberg haswritten a work that requires nospecial knowledge of physics Thisbook is a study of our understand¬ing of the theory from its creationto the present$24 95. clothBIRKHAUSERPLUTO'S REPUBLICby Peter MedawarIn this collection of his most famouswork. Medawar. a Nobel Prize¬winning researcher, takes on Freud.IQ psychologists, social Darwinism,mystical theologians, futurologistsand many more as he explores theworld of misconception aboutscience$8 95. paperOXFORDNOT IN OUR GENESby R C Lewontin, Steven Rose &Leon J KaminThree experts—each from theirrespective fields of genetics, neuro¬science and psychology—havebanded together to question therecent rise of biological interpreta¬tions of why we behave the waywe do$21 95. clothPANTHEONTHE McGRAW-HILL DICTIONARYOF SCIENTIFIC ANDTECHNICAL TERMSThis third edition of the internation¬ally acclaimed dictionary coversevery major field of science,engineering and technology Itcontains more than 115.000 defini¬tions and has been thoroughlyrevised and updated to reflectcurrent terminology, with specialemphasis on computer science$ 70 00. clothMcGRAW-HILLTHE LIMITS OF SCIENCEby P B MedawarMedawar's new book deals withthe largest questions humanity canpose such as "What is the natureof science"?/' "Is the growth ofscience self-limited?" and "DoesGod exist?" He then separatesthose which science may be ableto answer from those which arebeyond its limits$12 00, clothHARPER ROWTHE CREATION OF MATTERby Harald FritzschAlready a best seller in Germany,this new book by one of theworld's leading physicists for thefirst time provides the generalreader with an immensely readableaccount of the origins, evolutionand probable end of the universe$19 95. clothBASIC STAR WAVEby Fred Alan WolfA quantum physicist tells the storyof how physics can explain theworkings of the human mind Itshows that observation plays anactive role in altering the worldStar Wave shows how observationtransforms the inside world of thehuman mind as well$19 95. clothMACMILLANTHE PARTICLE CONNECTIONby Christine SuttonThe Particle Connection recounts,firsthand, the most exciting scien¬tific chase since DNA and thedouble helix Scientists at CERN.Europe's center for research in parti¬cle physics, are poised to make adiscovery that will forever changescience to find the missing link in apicture of the nature of matter$17 95. clothSIMON & SCHUSTERGOD AND THE NEW PHYSICSby Paul DaviesHow did the universe begin, andhow will it end? What is life? Themost profound and age-old ques¬tions of existence are tackled hereDavies contends that the newphysics offers a surer path to Godthan religion,$6 95, paperTOUCHSTONETHE GROWTH OFBIOLOGICAL THOUGHTby Ernst MayerThis major work traces the develop¬ment of the main problems ofbiology, from the earliest attemptsto find order in the diversity of lifeto modern research into themechanisms of gene transmission$3000, clothHARVARDLUNAR PHASE CHARTThis attractive, informative, poster-style chart shows the waxing andwaning phases of the moon for all365 days of 1985$600CELESTIAL PRODUCTS A RANDOM WALK IN SCIENCEAn anthology compiled byR L. WeberThis entertaining, pleasing andstimulating anthology provides aninsight into the wit and intellect ofthe scientific mind through abalanced blend of amusing andserious contributions, written byand about scientists The contentsinclude such titles as "When doesjam become marmalade?" and"Gulliver's Computer"$16 50, clothCRANE RUSSAK.MathematicsEngineering!MATHEMATICS FOR THEMILLIONby Lancelot HogbenTaking only the most elementaryknowledge for granted, the authorleads readers of this famous bookthrough the whole course fromsimple arithmetic to calculus$8 95. paperNORTONNUMERICAL ANALYSIS OFDIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONSby William Edmund MilneIn a new and amplified edition, thisbook provides in clear and highlypractical form everything requiredfor the numerical solution of manybasic types of differential equations$ 7 00, paperDOVER HARMONIC ANALYSISby Henry HelsonThis book provides a coherent,simply-presented introduction tothe active mathematical field ofharmonic analysis, organized sothat the reader can find a desiredpiece of information and follow theargument without much prelim¬inary work$27 95. clothADDISON-WESLEYCALCULUS OF VARIATIONSby Robert WemstockThis book written to fill the needfor a basic introduction to thecalculus of variations, has longbeen a standard reference forphysicists, engineers and a DiedmathematiciansS6 50. paperDOVER4 PROBABILITY WITHOUT TEARSby Derek RowntreeThis shod, easy-to-use primercovers the basic concepts of asubject—estimating and predictingthe likelihood of future events—which has become an indispens¬able tool in may fields, from insur¬ance to medical research$13 95. clothSCRIBNERMATHEMATICAL PASTIMESLudi Rerum Mathematicarumby Leon Battista AlbertiThis text by the great Renaissancemathematician and architectprovides insights into the history ofmathematical thought during thatperiod and reveals the parallelbetween the mind of a culturedRenaissance man looking towardthe future and that of today'scomputer user$14 95. clothHORIZONCRC STANDARD MATH TABLESedited by William H BeyerThe 27th edition has beenprepared to provide a convenient,broad spectrum of traditional andmodern mathematical data forscientific needs, with new exposi¬tory and tabular material$13 95. clothCRC PRESSMcGRAW-HILL'S ELECTRICALCODE HANDBOOKby Joseph F McPartlandBased on the 1984 Code this 18thedition of the standard referenceprovides detailed penetratingcoverage of difficult and controversial rules from one of the mostrespected experts in the industry$32 95 clothMcGRAW-HILLSELECTIONSBook love is your pass to the greatest, the purest and the mostperfect pleasure." Anthony TrollopeHH^^^^^^^^MMHMi^HHComputer ScienceTHE COMPUTER ESTABLISHMENTby Katharine Davis FishmanFrom boardroom to laboratory, thisbook shows how decisions aremade strategies are planned andpower is wielded within thecomputer industry The in side storyof America's most dy namic indus¬try from how it grew to where it isgoingS 7 95 paperVIcGRAW-HILLWHAT COMPUTERS CAN T DOby Hubert L DreyfusRarely has science and philosophybe*r so constructively joined as inrn nook Within the man/machinentersection the author zeroes inon the exact point which is decisivefor our self-understanding andhistorical orientationS 7 95. paperCARPERS ROW'HE SOFTWARE CATALOG OFSCIENCE & ENGINEERINGO ver 4300 programs for all majorV1icros ana Mims, are described tthis comprehensive catalognae.sed bv appur anon and bycomputer system a-if fuii vendorinformationS 29 OC paperELSEVIER SC ENCEWORDSTAR W'TH STYLEDy Roger B White JrThis is a hands-on guide to usingtne capabilities of tne popularsoftware to the fullest Starting withthe basics and progressing in easysteps, it shows you how to accessand build upon the software anddesign your own word processingprojects514 95. paperRES TONTHE IBM/PC GUIDE TOARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCEBY John Morone & Mark HilbushThis book makes it possible for PCowners to experience whar anintelligent computer might be likeThe text thoroughly explains theconcepts of artificial intelligenceand the reader can send for a freedemonstration floppy diskS19 95. paperBANBURY AN INTRODUCTION TOOPERATING SYSTEMSby Harvey M DeitelThis book offers complete cover¬age, exceptional readability, andthe latest innovations as well ascase studies on UNIX VAX CP/Mand VM Fully illustratedS33 95. clothADDISON-WESLEYMACINTOSH! COMPLETEby Doug ClappThe author spent six monthsbehind the scenes at Apple whilethe Macintosh was in its finalstages, and he describes in clearlanguage everything you need toknow about the computer that setnew standards for speed andpower$!9 95. paperSOFTALK BOOKSTURING'S MANby J David Bolterme author a classics professorwith a degree in computer scienceconsiders tne cultural impact ofcomputers on our age and findsroe outlook o' the computer age inmany ways bears more resem¬blance to that cf the ancient worldthan to that of the Enlightenment$8 95 paperUNIVERSITY OFNORTH CAROL.NATHE C" PRIMERDy L Hancock & M KriegerA full description of C languagecomplete with many examples toillustrate programming techniques,'his book leads through the steps ofC language, teaching how to readand write programsS14 95 paperMcGRAW-HILLTHE COGNITIVE COMPUTERby Roger C SchankThis book describes the story ofProfessor Schank s search for theintelligent machine of tomorrow,presenting artificai intelligence asan investigation into human under¬standing through which we learnnot only about computers butabout the complexities of our ownintelligenceS17 95. clothADDISON-WESLEYBACK TO BASICby John G Kemeny &Thomas E KurtzThis book by the creators of theworld's most popular computerlanguage presents the history ofBASIC and explains the philosoph¬ical and educational foundations ofthe language in the processanswering much of the recentcriticism directed at BASIC$12 95. paperADDISON-WESLEY WHOLE EARTHSOFTWARE CATALOGedited by Stewart BrandFrom the creators of the WholeEarth Catalog here is an accessibleconsumer's guide which selectsand assesses the best products inevery area of the world ofcomputers A highly-selectivereview of the programs the editorsthink will make the most differencein people's lives, it is also invitinglybrowsableS17 50. paperQUANTUM PRESSART/F/CIAL INTELLIGENCEby Patrick Henry WinstonThis revised edition reflects many ofthe changes taking place in thefield of artificial intelligence, andincludes new chapters on logic andlearning, with proceduresdescribed in program-like styleS3I 95. clothADDISON-WESLEYForeign Language'Travel ■■■■■■■■WINNIE ILLE PUby A A Milnetranslated into Latin byAlexander uenardHere is tne only book in Latin everto grace the /Vew York Timerbestseilei list We need not recountthe story suffice it to sav that inLatin or in English Pooh stands thetest of timeSI0 00 dothDUTTONTHE BACKPACKER'S MANUALby Cameron McNeisbThis big full-color handbook bythe Scottish climber and authorgives the hiker a sound andenthusiastic introduction to theskills and joys of backpacking Withadvice on equipment rules of thetrail, nutrition and more$9 95 paperTIMES BOOKBED & BREAKFAST US Aby Betty Rundback &Nancy KramerThis is the only guide with listingsfor each of the 50 states, plusCanada Its concise yet compre¬hensive format provides up-to-dateinformation on 500 B & Bs and 100agencies, guiding the traveller to10.000 homes in allS6 95. paperDUTTON VENICE OBSERVEDby Mary McCarthyF H Taylor of the Herald Tribunepraised this book for its "searchingobservations and astonishingcomprehension of the Venetiantaste and character (McCarthy) hasread widely enough to penetratethrough the intellectual and socialvapours of the lagoons"S3 95. paperHARCOURT BRACEA HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TOAFRICA & ARABIAby David Hatcher ChildressAn extraordinary life on the road—a unique combination of practicaltravel advice and far-out adventureThe author copes with the dailyproblems of money, substenanceshelter, even sex. as he ramblesfrom one incredible encounter tothe next$8 95 paperCHICAGO REVIEWENGLISH JOURNEYby J 6 PriestleyA fiftieth anniversary edition ofPriestly's classic documentarywork now illlustrated with periodphotographs Here are brilliantlydescribed visits to textile mills anachocolate factories, and encour *ters with a richly varied assortmentof English characters$24 95 clothUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOGERMANA STRUCTURAL APPROACHby Walter F W Lohnes &F W StrothmannIn this third edition the structuralapproach that enabled students todevelop right from the start a flexible command of the languaue(instead of a limited set of contrivedresponses) has been retained andmodified to reflect new teachingstrategiesS20 95, clothNORTONPETITE LAROUSSE ILLUSTRE 1985The new edition of this world-renowned one-volume dictionaryand encyclopedia in Frenchcontains more than 75 000entries facts, figures, and infor¬mation on just about anythingyou'd ever want to knowS39 95 clothLAROUSSEGRAN DICCIONARIOMODERNOby Ramon Garcia-PelayoIn an elegant new format thishighly praised, revised and updateddictionary more than meets theneeds of everyone involved in thestudy, translation and teaching ofSpanish and English With sectionson classical technical and scientificterms, color plates and grammarresumesS29 95. clothLAROUSSECOPING WITH FRANCEby Fay SharmanThe French are not. on the surfacethe friendliest people in the worldThis is a key to the French way oflife, a practical companion guide forthe visitor, with detailed informa¬tion and advice on everything fromthe vital to the trivialS14 95. clothBASIL BLACKWELLPeople who have read good literature have lived more than peoplewho cannot or will not read." s. i. Hayakavjamm^^mmmmmmmm^mCookingiTHE STARVINGSTUDENT'S COOKBOOKby Dede NapoliEven if you've never boiled water,you can learn to cook simple,filling, nutritious and deliciousmeals—inexpensively With a dailynutrition guide, hints for bettercooking, and no-fuss, no-mussrecipes for one or more which canbe prepared in as little as fiveminutesS 5 95. paperWARNER BOOKSFREUD'S OWN COOKBOOKby James Hillman & Charles BoerAt last—the definitive work Freudwould have given us had he notbeen so distracted by his patients,anxieties and dreams Interlardedwith recipes for Freud Clams, StekelTartare, and Erogenous Scones areFreud's never-before-publishedrevelations about his colleaguesand their gastronomicalpeculiarities$5 95, paperHARPER & ROW THE LAUREL'S KITCHENBREAD BOOKby Laurel RobertsonWith the same dedication towhole-food cookery pioneered bythe best-selling Laurel's Kitchen.the authors have turned to bread,the true staff of life, and producedan illustrated treasury of instruc¬tion, advice and delectable recipesfor the novice and the experiencedbakerSI9 95, clothRANDOM HOUSETHE FANNIE FARMERBAKING BOOKby Marion Cunningham800 superb baking recipes—forpies, cookies, cakes, breads,muffins, crackers—from the inspiredcook who created the originalFannie Farmer Cookbook With300 line drawings by LaurenJarrettSI6 95, clothKNOPFTHE ALICE B TOKLASCOOKBOOKThe famous collection of recipesfrom the salon of Alice B Toklasand Gertrude Stem The 350recipes (including the one foryou-know-what) are woven withreminiscences that bring to lifethat memorable time513 95, clothHARPER & ROWTHE IOWA WRITER'SWORKSHOP COOKBOOKedited by Connie BrothersYou'll have a terrific time concoct¬ing the favorite recipes of over 100renowned fiction writers and poetsassociated with the University ofIowa Writer's workshop Each ofthe contributing authors—fromAnne Tyler to Galway Kinnell—hasincluded an anecdote or poem514 95, clothFREDERICK FELLON-CAMPUS COOKBOOKby Mollie FitzgeraldCooking up a storm is possible in adorm room with these 50 easyrecipes that don't reguire a kitchenUsing handing appliances like hotpots, blenders, and toaster ovens,you can make dishes ranging fromgazpacho to Baked BrieS 5 95. paperWORKMAN CRAIG CLAIBORNE'S THE NEWAJEW YORK TIMES COOKBOOKThe best-selling successor to theclassic New York Times Cookbook,prepared by Craig Claiborne incollaboration with master chefPierre Franey This book is both aninstrument for serious cooking anda personal statement about thepreparation and eating of foodSI9 95, clothTIMES BOOKSEVERYTHING YOU WANT TOKNOW ABOUT CHINESECOOKINGby Pearl Kong ChenA book designed for those whoaspire to gourmet status as Chinesecooks The 250 recipes, which canbe prepared with readily-availableingredients, are supplemented witha fascinating history of Chinesefood and its role in Chinese culture _SI9 95, cloth ©BARRON'S Reference iJOB SEARCH STRATEGY FORCOLLEGE GRADSby Susan Bernard &Gretchen ThompsonThe authors, respectively a Contin¬uing Education Specialist and theDirector of Placement at UCLA’sGraduate School of Management,have developed a 10-step planspecifically to help college gradsfind work in their fieldsS3 95, paperBOB ADAMSTHE ADDRESS BOOKHow to Reach AnyoneWho's Anyoneby Michael LevineA revised and updated edition ofthe book that contains theconfidential mailing addresses ofthousands of the world's powerful,extraordinary and influentialpeopleS5 95, paperPERIGEETHE OXFORD DICTIONARY OFQUOTATIONSThe first substantial revision since1941 of this mdispensible referencebook retains two-thirds of thequotations of the original and addsthousands of new quotations thatwill resonate a bell in the memory,carry a ring of truth, or simplyentertainS39 95, clothOXFORDROGET'S INTERNATIONALTHESAURUSrevised by Robert L ChapmanAmerica's classic, most authorita¬tive thesaurus—the first unabridgededition of the bestselling thesaurusof all time—finally available inpaperback, with 256.000 syno¬nyms and related words and aneasy-to-use alphabetical index58 95. paperHARPER & ROWLISA BIRNBACH'SCOLLEGE BOOKIn school-by-school rundowns, mthe hip. funny and caustic voicethat's made her famous, the authorof The Preppy Handbook capturesthe essence of two hundred majorcolleges, from sex and drugs topolitics and late-night pizza59 95, paperBALLANTINECLEMENT WOOD'SUNABRIDGED RHYMINGDICTIONARYNow available in paperback thischoice reference work for poetsand writers of verse or lyricscontains more entries than anysimilar book and features acomplete, self-taught course inwriting verseSll 95. paper0 SIMON & SCHUSTER OXFORD GUIDE TO THEENGLISH LANGUAGEcompiled by E S. C Weiner &Joyce M HawkinsA comprehensive and handy refer¬ence work that offers guidance onword formation, advice on pronun¬ciation of difficult words andspecific points of grammar, as wellas a 30.000 word dictionaryS25 00, clothOXFORDROBERT'S RULES OF ORDERFor the first time in paperback, thisis the current edition of the recog¬nized guide to parliamentary proce¬dure. containing everything youneed to know about conducting orparticipating in a meetingS 7 95 paperSCOTT FORESMANHOW TO PAY YOUR WAYTHROUGH COLLEGE THESMART WAYby John J LyonsA fact-filled, inspiring idea book forevery college student looking fornew ways to ease the pinch oftuition costs while gaming valuableexperience in business and market¬ing Here are case histories, helpfultips and solid advice about actualbusinesses started by studentsS 7 95, paperBANBURYSTUDYA Guide to Effective Study,Revision & ExaminationTechniquesby Robert BarrassThis book offers practical advice onstudy techniques that will ease thetransition from high school tocollege With sections on writingreports, skim reading, notetakingand preparing for exams$8 95. paperCHAPMAN & HALLRULES OF THUMBby Tom ParkerA rule of thumb is a homemaderecipe for making a guess, an easy-to-remember guide that fallssomewhere between mathematicsand a shot in the dark Thisamusing and useful compendiumcontains rules of thumb for every¬thing from adjusting an anvil todesigning a submarine$5 95 paperHOUGHTON MIFFLINTHE SILVER PALATE COOKBOOKby Julee Rosso & Sheila LukingsHere are recipes for 350 superblycooked, flawlessly seasoned dishesfrom the unique food shop in NewYork Complete with cooking hints,ideas for entertaining, suggestedmenus, and more$9 95, paperWORKMANMy education was the liberty I had to read indiscriminately and allthe time, with my eyes hanging out.” Dylan ThomasVisual ArtsiON NOT BEING ABLE TO PAINTby Joanna FieldThe author of A Life of One s Ownturns her keen eye and eloquentpen to how the creative process isfreed and what interferes with thatfreedom The discoveries shemakes are significant to all levels ofpainters, writers, poets andthinkersS6 95 paperTAR CHERPHOTOJOURNALISMby Arthur RothsteinA classic in its field, this book willappeal both to serious studentsand to anyone who has everwondered about how the dramaticnews photos we see every dayare madeS12 95 paperFOCAL PRESSDIANE ARBUSMAGAZINE WORKby Thomas W SouthallThis volume presents eleven yearsof Arbus's commercial photog¬raphy. never before assembled andrarely recognized in the considera¬tion of her work Included areportraits of Norman Mailer. JayneMansfield. W H Auden. TokyoRose and other luminariesS35 00 clotnAPERTURETHE GREAT MECHANICALWOODEN TOY BOOKby Ed & Stevie BaldwinWhile fads in toys have come andgone, intricate and entertainingmechanical contrivances like theones in this book have enchantedyoung and old alike for centuriesWith illustrated step-by-stepinstructions, materials lists andcutting diagrams$9 95 paperCHILTONMANUAL OF GRAPHICTECHNIQUES 4by Tom Porter & Sue GoodmanFor architects, graphic designersand artists—both professional andstudent—this is an innovative andthorough introduction to therendering of plans The fourth bookin this widely-respected seriesshows every aspect of developingand presenting plans, from interiorsto sectional perspectives$9 95. paperSCRIBNER ATLAS OF FORESHORTENINGby John CodyRendering the human figure inperspective—when viewed at anangle or foreshortened—is one ofthe greatest challenges to an artist sskill The task is now- made easierwith this unique collection of 500photographs of the nude bodyshown in all degrees offoreshorteningS19 95 paperVAN NOSTRAND REINHOLDDESIGNER'S GUIDE TOCOLOR I & IItext by James StocktonEach of these volumes features agraphic presentation of more than1000 color combinations docu¬menting the variety of effectsproduced by colors interacting withothers A valuable reference notonly to graphic designers, but alsoto those m fashion and interiordesignS9 95 each volume paperCHRONICLE BOOKSTHE MATERIALS OF THE ARTISTAND THEIR USE IN PAINTINGby Max DoernerIn print continuously since 1934this book is the accepted authorityon questions of techniques andmaterials Revised and updated bythe translator it is the finest bookon the craft of painting for arthistorians, painters weekend artistsand general readersS9 95 paperHARCOURT, BRACETHE FOURTH DIMENSION ANDNON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY INMODERN ARTby Linda Dalrymple HendersonDuring the first three decades ofthis century the concept of thefourth dimension had a liberatingeffect on arts in nearly every impor¬tant movement This lost traditionof spatial concepts, as resurrectedand presented by the authorsupplies a critical element in thehistory of twentieth-century artS18 50 paperPRINCETONArchitecture!EXPERIMENTS INGOTHIC STRUCTUREby Robert MarkThis fascinating study of the struc¬tural elements of Gothic cathedralswas written by an engineer whohas spent the last 15 years applyinganalytical techniques of structuralmechanics to Gothic buildings tosolve continuing historicalarguments about the function ofthe elements of GothicarchitectureS7 95, paperMIT PRESS DRAFTING TIPS & TRICKSby Bob SyvanenThis book will help anyone whowants to design and draw houseplans or to understand and con¬tribute to the design process Itincludes sessions on equipmentdesign and drafting250 illustrationsS 7 95. paperEAST WOODSBAUHAUSby Frank WhitfordThe appearance of our designedenvironment owes much to theideas and activities of a schoolof art and design founded inGermany in 1919 and closed downby the Nazis in 1933 The author'scomplete introduction to theBauhaus traces the ideas behind itsconception and describes its teach¬ing methods$8 95, paperTHAMES & HUDSONA HISTORY OF BUILDING TYPESby Nikolaus PevsnerHere is the first survey of buildingtypes ever to be written, a guide tovital and often overlooked featuresof the architectural and socialinheritance of the West With over700 illustrations, it describes twentydistinct types of buildingsS19 50. paperPRINCETONFORM FOLLOWS FIASCOby Peter BlakeIn this book subtitled Why-Modern Architecture Hasn'tWorked." the author uses wordsand pictures to produce a witty,iconoclastic attack on the errors ofthe recent architectural past and torecommend a new future coursefor international planning$9 95. paperATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESSENTOURAGE A TRACING FILEby Ernest BurdenThis is the ultimate tracing guidefor design professionals includedare all the most commonly usedperspective angles and scalesfor figures, vehicles, trees, andother useful items Over 3000illustrationsSI9 95. paperMcGRAW-HILLTHE TALL BUILDINGARTISTICALLY RECONSIDEREDby Ada Louise HuxtableFrom the Pulitzer Prize winningarchitecture critic, here is anenergetic defense of cities and abrilliant consideration of theskyscrapers as art as business asthe product of politics and specula¬tion With over 150 photographsS27 50. clothPANTHEONPROJECTION DRAWINGby Thomas C WangIn this refreshing presentation ofarchitectural projections and theirapplications in drawing the authorfocuses on the drawing processrather than the techniques ofprojections, integrating bothconceptual and visual aspects ofprojectionS15 95 paperVAN NOSTRAND RElNHOt D GREENE & GREENEby Randall MakinsonAvailable for the first time in anattractive paperbound boxed setthese two volumes are the mostcomprehensive ever published onCharles anti Henry Greene whoseworks stand as the finest expres¬sions of the Arts and Craftsmovement in AmericaS39 95. paperGIBBS M SMITHPerforming ArtsiREFLECTIONS FROMTHE KEYBOARDby David DubaiIn this book the Peabody Awardwinning interviewer bringstogether 35 internationallycelebrated pianists to give us anintimate and fascinating portrait ofthe concert worldS19 95 clothSUMMITFIRST STEPS IN TEACHINGCREATIVE DANCE TO CHILDRENby Mary JoyceThis book, in its second edition,presents 34 easy-to-follow lessonplans for instructors who have hadno previous experience teachingdance to children kindergartenthrough sixth grade$9 95 paperMAYFIELDDANCE A CREATIVEART EXPERIENCEby Margaret N H'DoublerIn this classic work on theaesthetics of dance the authorrelates dance specifically to theexperience of teacher and studentand affirms her application of thisart form to a changing culturalpatternS 7 95 paperUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSINGLENN GOULD VARIATIONSedited by John McGreevyA collection of essays written bythe pianist s friends and associatesincluding Leonard Bernstein.Yehudi Menuhim and RichardKostelanetz, combined with articlesabout Gould from numerousmagazines and essays by GouldhimselfSI2 95 paperQUILLGLENGARRY GLEN ROSSby David MametWinner of the 1984 Pulitzer Prizeand a smash Broadway hit "Thebest new American play of theseason Wonderfully funny, a playto see remember and cherish "—Clive BarnesS6 95 paperGROVEMONOLOGUES MEN,VOLUME 1 & VOLUME 2MONOLOGUES WOMENVOLUME I & VOLUME 2Edited by Robert Emerson &Jane GrumbachEach of these little volumes containfifty modern monologues with abrief explanation of the actionraking place They are excellentboth for auditions and forcaseworkS 3 95 eac h paperDRAMA BOOK SPEC I At ISISWhen I get a little money, I buy books; and if any is left, I buy foodand clothes." Desiderius ErasmusTHE LIVES OF THEGREAT COMPOSERSby Harold C SchonbergIn this revised version of his highlysuccessful book, the author tracesthe consecutive line of composersfrom Claudio Monteverdi to ArnoldSchoenberg through a series offascinating biographical chaptersbringing the reader closer to anidentification with the composersand thus closer to an understand¬ing of their music$24 95, clothNORTONMODERN DANCEFUNDAMENTALSby Nona Schurman &Sharon Leigh ClarkThis book presents simple, basicexercises in dance form for thebeginning student or teacher, intro¬duces these exercises with Labano-tation, a shorthand system ofdescribing dance movements, andsuggests possible uses of thematerial in a university orschool situationSI4 50, paperMACMILLANTHE STUDENT ACTOR'SHANDBOOKby Louis John DezseranIn this book the author has createda series of exercises and gamesdesigned to help the studentactor investigate and improvehis techmgueSIO 95, paperMAYFIELDNIGHT, MOTHERby Marsha NormanA spare but lyrical dialogue probingdeeply into the mother-daughterrelationship while making adisturbing statement about responsibility and courage, concludingthat one s right to control one sown life extends even to suicide$6 95, paperHILL & WANGTHE FANTASTIKSby Tom Jones & Harvey SchmidtThe stage is a wooden platformthe scenery a cardboard moon, theactors a boy. a girl, and theirfathers On the face of it very littlebut in fact the substance of thelongest-running production inAmerican theatrical history$2 50 paperBARD THE NOEL COWARDSONG BOOKThis is a book crowded withdelights the complete words andmusic to 51 of the master lyricist smost famous songs, with eachsection preceded by autobiograph¬ical comments describing thehistory and inspiration ofeach song$14 95, paperMETHUENFOUR FRENCH PLAYStranslated by W S MerwinAlthough Merwm's reputation isbased on his poetry, he is anaccomplished translator as wellThe four plays included are "Robertthe Devil," "Furcaret." "The Rival ofthe Master," and Marivaux's "TheFalse Confessions"$7 95, paperATHENEUMMETHOD TO THEIR MADNESSby Foster HirschHere is a close, loving look at thelongest-lived, most controversial,and most influential institution inthe history of American theatre,the Actors Studio Hirsch's bookcombines history, biography, dramaand film criticism with theoryand gossip$18 95, clothNORTONTHE ACTOR'S SCENEBOOKedited by Michael SchulmanHere are 84 fully-playable scenesalong with story notes Includedare scenes for one man and onewoman, two men, two women,and monologues for both menand women$3 95. paperBANTAMWHAT IS THEATRE7by Eric BentleyBesides chronicling trie better partof a quarter century s dramaticevents, the author provides ahappy example of all that is best irtne idiom of modern dramatic cntic ism With reprinted reviews .’individual productions rnd several$10 95 paperLIMELIGHT THE COMPLETE PENGUINSTEREO RECORD &CASSETTE GUIDEby Edward GreenfieldWith more and more classicalrecordings available every day, thiscomprehensive survey of the field isan invaluable tool for the seriouscollector, both as a reference and asa practical guide$12 95, paperPENGUINTHE STANISLAVSKI SYSTEMby Soma MooreThis pioneering guide—nowrevised—has long been a favoriteamong students and teachers ofacting With a new chapter on thesubtext of a role$4 95. paperPENGUINMASTER HAROLDAND THE BOYSby Athol FugardA provocative journey into thepsychosis of racism by the premierSouth African playwright, actorand director$4 95. paperPENGUINTHE NEW YORK TIMESCROSSWORD PUZZLEDICTIONARYedited by Tom Pulliam &Clare GrundmanThis is the largest and mostcomplete of all puzzle dictionarieswith more than one-naif millionwords, including thousands ofgeographical and fore; r ^isA-e-TIMID VIRGINS MAKEDULL COMPANYand Other Puzzles, Pitfalls,and Paradoxesby Dr Crypton THE OXFORD GUIDE TOWORD GAMESby Tony AugardeThis charming reference bookencompases crosswords, acrostics,anagrams, word squares. Scrabble,and other games of verbalingenuity, and recounts the origins,history and rules of many variantgames$14 95, clothOXFORDTHE EXERCISE MYTHby Henry A Solomon, M DIs exercise dangerous to health7According to the author arenowned cardiologist, it is, and hegoes on to argue that the dangersof strenuous exercise far outweighthe unrealistic benefits Americanshave come to expect from it$12 95, clothHARCOURT BRACE5000 BCand Other Philosophical Fantasiesby Raymond SmullyanThe author is a modern-day LewisCarroll, and his challenging array oflogical puzzles, paradoxesdialogues and essays ranges fromsingle-line riddles to essay-lengthreflections on the differencebetween dreams and reality$5 95 paperST MARTIN'SGETTING OVER GETTING HIGHby Bernard Green, Ph DA no-nonsense guide to gettingover stimulant dependence aimedat anyone who feels it's easier tostay on stimulants—from caffeineto hallucinogens—than dowithout them The book explainsnot only how to get over thedependence, but how to get overtne need for stimulants$6 95 paperQUILLSPORTS INJURIESby Malcolm Read, M.DHealth & RecreationiTHE CITIZEN KANE BOOKby Pauline KaelAvailable again in an affordablepaperback, here is the book on themovie With 81 stills from the filmand a carefully researched andpenetratingly written analysis ofthe film, its making, its influenceand the personalities involved$16 95. paperLIMELIGHTTHE MUSICAL COMPANIONedited by A L Bacharach &J R PearceThis general audience guideto classical music—vocal andinstrumental—covers the historydevelopment structure and under¬standing of all musical forms$12 95. paperHARCOURT BRACENORTON ANTHOLOGY OFWESTERN MUSICedited by Claude V PaliscaThis comprehensive historicalanthology is designed to encompass the broad sweep of musicalcomposition in the Western worldfrom the Middle Ages to thepresent by the inclusion of worksrepresenting every important trendgenre and national school$17 95 paperNORTON of Science Digest$14 95 clothVIKINGPOOH'S WORKOUT BOOKby Ethan MorddenAre you a Pooh Tyoe i TiggerType, or a Piglet Type7 Thiswonderful little book provides youwith that Possibly Useful informa¬tion as well as worthwhile exercisesthat cover everything fromJumping and Squeaking throughBouncing and Avoiding a Bath$10 95 clothDUTTON ARCO4If we encounter a man of rare intellect, we should ask him whatbooks he reads." Ralph WaldoLawmmmmmmmmJURIES ON TRIALby Paul Di PernaOur Constitution guarantees theright to trial by a jury of one's peersBut do juries guarantee justice? Is ittime for a change? Di Perna exam¬ines the history of the jury system,considers important cases of thepast and reports on recent trialsSI5 95. clothDEMBNER BOOKSLOOKING AT LAW SCHOOL,Revised editionedited by Stephen GillersThis thoroughly revised andexpanded edition is indispensablefor anyone considering or alreadyattending law school It offers vitalinformation and advice aboutselecting the right school choosingcourses, surviving the first year,financing a legal education andplanning a careerS8 95. paperMERIDIANINTRODUCTION TOAMERICAN LAWby Lawrence M FriedmanThis invaluable book explains howlaws are made, from the U S andstate constitutions and legislaturesto the small-town zoning board,and how law is administered bycourts and agencies of every sort$22 95. clothNORTON RECONSTRUCTINGAMERICAN LAWby Bruce A AckermanAckerman speaks for a rising gener¬ation of lawyers seeking to liberatethemselves from Realists who havedominated American law Hedescribes how modern Americanlawyers are moving beyondRealism to fashion a new legalargument that will transform theshape of American lawS6 95. paperHARVARDLAW DICTIONARY. 2nd editionby Steven H GifisThis new edition is designedespecially for law students, anexcellent review for all bar appli¬cants as well as a valuable refer¬ence for lawyers, legal secretariesand others who professionally dealwith legal terminology$8 95 paperBARRON'STHE INSANITY DEFENSE & THETRIAL OF JOHN W HINCKLEY, JRby Lincoln CaplanWould limiting, or even abolishing,the insanity defense improvesociety's protection againstcrazies' who kill, rape and rob?No says the author, a formerWhite House fellow, and heexplains why as he presents thejumble of evidence at the two-month trial of Ronald Reagan'swould-be assasm$13 95. clothGODINE COURT REFORM ON TRIALby Malcolm M FeeleyA bold and carefully reasonedanalysis of how change comesabout in our criminal courts andwhy reform so often fails Whetheror not one agrees with the author'sconclusions, his approach providesone of the most thoughtful exami¬nations of the problem in recentyears$7 95. paperBASIC BOOKSJUSTICE WITHOUT LAW?by Jerold S AuerbachWhy are Americans the mostlegalistic and litigious people in theworld? What does that say aboutour values, ideals, the quality of oursocial relationships? What are thebenefits and what is the price wepay? These are among the ques¬tions the author considers in thefirst history of dispute settlementin the US$6 95, paperOXFORDCONCEPT OF A LEGAL SYSTEMby Joseph RazDr Raz examines a new approachto some traditional jurisprudentialquestions concerning the existenceand structure of a legal system Heexpounds on previous theories ofBentham. Austin. Hohfield, Kelsenand Hart$13 95. paperCLARENDON PRESS29 REASONS NOT TO GOTO LAW SCHOOL. 2nd editionby Ralph Warner and Toni lharaA look at the dubious pleasures ofgoing to law school with two newreasons not to go This book cansave you three years, $30,000 andyour sanity$6 95. paperNOLO PRESS THE BEST LAWYERS IN AMERICAby Steven Naifeh &Gregory White SmithHarvard law graduates Naifeh andSmith present the "blue book" ofthe best and brightest lawyers infive specialties domestic relations,trusts and estates, criminal defense,credifors' and debtors' rights andcivil litigation$7 95 paperPERIGEECRIMINALS AND VICTIMSby Ldis G ForerForer offers a penetrating look atspecific areas of crime—white-collar crime, family crime and streetcrime The inequities in sentencingbetween rich and poor, young andold. black and white are mercilesslyexposed$6 95 paperNORTON Social SciencesiTHE UNDERCLASSby Ken AulettaThe people whose problems arenot likely to be solved by the offerof a job are examined in detail inAuletta's sympathetic yet dispas¬sionate book on the perenniallypoor$6 95. paperVINTAGE BOOKSDEPRESSIONby Aaron T Beck, M DInterestingly written, highly inform¬ative. well documented and ofhigh scientific quality, this bookmakes an important contribution tothe psychology of depression$11 95. paperUNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA UNCOMMON THERAPY .by Jay HaleyThis casebook of an innovativepsychiatrist's work in short-termtherapy provides a comprehensivelook at Dr Milton Erickson'stheories and how they have beenused on problems that are likely tooccur at various stages of thehuman life cycle$5 95. paperNORTONTHE LANGUAGE OF CHANGEby Paul WatzlawickWatzlawick. a world authority onhuman communication andcommunication therapy, points outa basic contradiction in the waytherapists use language In thisbook he reveals how therapistsmust learn to use the bizarrelanguage of the patient's uncon¬scious before change can occur$12 50. hardbackBASIC BOOKSBEYOND THE IVORY TOWERby Derek BokBok examines the complex ethicaland social issues facing modemuniversities today and suggestsapproaches that will allow theacademic institution both to servesociety and to continue its primarymission of teaching and research$ 7 95. paperHARVARDFEELING GOODby David BurnsThis best-selling book maps out aplan for escaping the dark forest ofdepression according to the prin¬ciples of Cognitive Therapy Burnspurports that by changing the waywe think we can change the waywe feel, too$3 95. paperSIGNETTHE PRESENTATION OF SELFIN EVERYDAY LIFEby Ervmg GoffmanThis classic contribution to selfunderstanding deals with thetheme of human behavior in socialsituations and the way that weappear to others Using themetaphor of the theatrical perfor¬mance. Goffman shows how wepresent, guide and control ourexpressions$4 95. paperDOUBLE DAYTHE DENIAL OF DEATHby Ernest BeckerThis Pulitzer Prize winning bookplunges into the psychological,philosophical, and theologicalcharacteristics of the healthy andunhealthy ways people deal withdeath Elisabeth Kubler Ross calls ita brilliant synthesis of themost important disciplines inlife"$5 95. paperFREE PRESSTHE INTERPRETATIONOF DREAMSby Sigmund FreudAbout this book Freud himselfsaid. "It contains the mosr valuableof all the discoveries it has been mygood fortune to make' This defin¬itive translation s detailed commentary and scrupulous cross referencmg show the development ofFreud's thought$ 3 95, paperAVON£The best effect of any book is that it excites the reader to selfactivity." Thomas CarlyleFAMILY KALEIDOSCOPEby Salvador MinuchinFamily Kaleidoscope challenges usonce more to view the individualwithin the larger pattern of thefamily the reader is pulled intodialogue with the author and isasked to view human and socialrealities by way of personalanecdotes, protocols, fables andplays It is a call for active par¬ticipation and re-vision515 00. clothHARVARDSURVIVING SCHIZOPHRENIAby E Fuller Toney. M DSchizophrenia strikes one out ofevery hundred Americans in theirlifetime In this first book for the layreader on the most widespread ofall mental illnesses, Torrey explainswhat schizophrenia is and isn't andhow family and friends can under¬stand and help the schizophrenicS20 00 clothHARPERIN A DIFFERENT VOICEby Carol GilliganGilligan believes that psychologyhas persistently and systematicallymisunderstood women—theirmotives, moral commitments, theirpsychological growth and theirspecial view of what is importantm lifeS5 95. paperHARVARDTHE ASSAULT ON TRUTHby Jeffrey Moussaieff MassonIn 1895 Freud formulated theprofound theory that emotionaldisturbances in adults stem fromactual early traumatic experiences,rhe knowledge of which has beenrepressed Freud eventuallyrenounced the theory, but Massonsuggests in his book that the"seduction theory " may have beenvalid after all516 95. clothFARRAR, STRAUSS. GIROUXTHE NIGHTMAREby Ernest Hartmann, M DHartmann, a famed psychoanalystand sleep researcher explores thepsychology and biology of thenightmare in this comprehensiveexplanation Written in laylanguage. The Nightmare is filledwith information about creativity,madness, dreaming in general andrhe biology of the mindSI8 95. clothBASIC THE ABSORBENT MINDby Maria MontessoriThis book speaks with specialimmediacy to the ever-deepeningcrisis in American educationMontessori insists on "educationfrom birth" and gives penetratinginsight into the development ofpersonality, language, intelligenceand character in childrenS4 95LAURELTHE SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONOF AMERICAN MEDICINEby Paul StarrThis social history of the Americanmedical profession shows how ourhealth care industry has been trans¬formed from a humble, altruisticprofession to the industrial sover¬eignty of today The book is winnerof the 1984 Bancroft Prize inAmerican historySll 95. paperHARPERTHE DECLINING SIGNIFICANCEOF RACEby William Julius WilsonIn this book Wilson presents adetailed interpretation of how thechanging economic and politicalstructure of the United States hasaffected the position of blackAmericans It has won the SydneyM Spivack Award of the AmericanSociological Association$6 95. paperUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOFEMININITYby Susan BrownmillerBest known for her landmark studyof rape in Against Our Will. Brown -miller explores the many character¬istics comprising what our societydefines as "feminine" in this new-bookS14 95. clothLINDENHOW TO SUPPRESSWOMEN'S WRITINGby Joanna RussThis quirkily written book coversthe many attitudmal problems andmisconceptions that have causedthe world to disregard and shunwomen's artistic attempts andproductsS8 95 paperUNIVERSITY OF TEXASTHE PICTURES IN YOUR HEADby William Glasser, M DGlasser explains and illustrates"control theory " which purportsthat everything we do, think and SHENFANby William HintonThis is a follow up to Hinton'sFanshen. an account of hisworking in a small Chinese townduring the critical post¬revolutionary years In Shenfan hereturns to the town and lets theChinese peasants tell the stories ofwhat has happened in their lives510 95. paperVINTAGETHE GIRL I LEFT BEHINDBy Jane O'ReillyThis collection of writings byjournalist O'Reilly examines thepersonal and political issues thathave affected—and changed—women's lives It is a perceptiveanalysis of what the evolution ofwomen's roles has meant towomen and to society at large$5 95. paperMACMILLANNARCISSIMDENIAL OF THE TRUE SELFby Alexander Lowen, M DThis interpretation of narcissismexplores the nature and causes ofthis prevalent personality disorderof the late twentieth centuryLowen probes beneath behaviorand psychological definitions toshow how feeling can be restoredand the integrity of the selfregained$4 95 paperMACMILLANCITIES AND THE WEALTHOF NATIONSby Jane JacobsIn this iconoclastic work Jacobsargues that nations are strictly theeconomic creatures of their citiesbecoming wealthy as their citiesbecome more productive andnumerous, subsiding into povertyas cities lose economic vitalitySI7 95. clothRANDOM HOUSEIN THE FREUD ARCHIVESby Janet MalcolmThis book is the narrative of anunlikely, tragicomic encounteramong three men. a psychoanalystand scholar of psychoanalysis, arestless Sanskrit scholar turnedpsychoanalyst turned anti-Freudian. and a former assistant tothe Rolling Stones and self-taughtFreud scholar511 95 dothKNOPF THE MYTH OF MENTAL ILLNESSby Thomas SzaszThis book has revolutionized think¬ing throughout the Western worldabout the nature of the psychiatricprofession and the moral implica¬tions of its practices It sends out ared alert, warning us of the dangersof an over-psychiatrized culture$5 95. paperHARPER ROWWILD JUSTICEby Susan JacobyRevenge what the author calls a"kind of wild justice.” is exploredand dissected in this all-encompass¬ing treatment Supported by exten¬sive research. Jacoby investigatesthe bloody history of revenge in lifeand literature and its involvemenetm criminal justice psychology,morality, religion and sexualityS6 95. paperHARPER ROWTHE FREUDIAN FALLACYby E M ThorntonThis century has been called thecentury of igmund Freud, yet thisbook makes the heretical claimsthat Freud's central postulate, theunconscious mind, does not exist,that his theories were based onpathological phenomena, and thatFreud was under the influence ofdrugsSI7 95. clothDIALTHE REPRESSION OFPSYCHOANALYSISby Russell JacobyHow classical psychoanalysis,which once attracted a broadrange of intellectuals, rebels, andwomen, became transformed intothe conventional wisdom it istoday forms the heart of Jacoby 'sprovocative taleS16 95 clothBASICSISTERHOOD IS GLOBALedited by Robin MorganEditor of the 1970 women smovement primer. Sisterhood isPowerful. Morgan has againcollected an anthology of feministwritings, this time from all over theworld it includes essays by womenfrom 79 countries, includingFrance Ghana. Portugal the SovietUnion and CubaSI2 95 paperDOU8LEDAYFATHERS AND SONSby Lewis YablonskyYablonsky draws upon case studiesand interviews with a cross sectionof 100 fathers and sons to definethe classic prototypes of theautocratic, egocentric or distantfather and the compliant or rebel¬lious son—and how these rolescan be restructured to removeantogomsmsS 7 95 paperFIRESIDEABORTION & THE POLITICSOF MOTHERHOODby Kristin LukerAbortion is a persistently devisivequestion that affects virtually everylevel of American political life, frompresidential campaigns to localzoning boards This book is abalanced < omprehensive and lucidstudy of rhe issueSI4 95 clothUNIVERSIIY Of C Al IFORNIA ieei comes iium insiue ui us auu isnot as many believe, a response tothings and people around usSI4 95 dothHARPER ROWSELECTIONSOf Local InterestiTHE PLAN FOR RESTORATIONAND ADAPTIVE USE OF THEFRANK LLOYD WRIGHT HOMEAND STUDIOThe Restoration Committee ofThe Frank Lloyd Wright Homeand Studio Foundation20 b/w photographs. 50 diagramsS25 00. spiral boundN£\VTHE CHICAGO SCHOOLOF SOCIOLOGYinstitutionalization. Diversity, andthe Rise of Sociological Researchby Martin BulmerFrom 1915 to 1935 the fertileresearch community of social scien¬tists at the University of Chicagopioneered empirical research andquantitative methods, shaping thefuture of twentieth-centuryAmerican sociology and relatedfields as well Bulmer explores thesources of the creative drive thatproduced not only the distinctiveschool of sociology under W IThomas. Robert E Park Ernest WBurgess William F Ogburn. andothers, but also influential schoolsof political science and economicsS29 00. cloth CHICAGO'S FAMOUS BUILDINGSA Photographic Guide to theCity's Architectural Landmarksand Other Notable BuildingsThird Edition,Revised and Enlargedby Ira J BachWith Introductory Essays byCarl W Condit &Hugh Dalziel DuncanThe standard pocket guide to thearchitecture of Chicago—the city ofBurnham and Mies van der Rohe12 p maps. 164 b/w platesS15 00. cloth, S6 95. paperNE^EVALUATINGCHICAGO SOCIOLOGYA Guide to the Literature, with anAnnotated BibliographyLester R KurtzWith a foreward byMorris JanowitzThe history of sociology in Americafrom World War I to the mid-1930'scan be written largely as the historyof the University of Chicagodepartment Kurtz provides an idealreference guide to the literatureand critical commentary on the"Chicago school' and a history(if the department fa rn IBS .until 1950$22 00 cloth A GUIDE TO CHICAGO'SPUBLIC SCULPTUREby Ira J Bach &Mary Lackritz GrayWith an introduction byFranz Schulze4 Guide to Chicago s Public Sculp¬ture is the most comprehensivehandbook of Chicago's publicsculpture available The product ofprodigious research, including interviews with living artists, it providesindividual entries on each of theworks in the metropolitan areaselected These entries givelocation, title, sculptor, and a briefdescription of the work, comple¬tion date, installation date, abiography of the sculptor, and,where appropriate, information onthe subject Photographs—most ofwhich were specially commis¬sioned for this book —illustrateeach entry 14 maps 210 b/wphotos$20 cloth. $8 95. paperBURNHAM OF CHICAGOArchitect and Plannerby Thomas S HinesHines has provided an intelli¬gently organized, well-written andfascinating acr ount of Burnham'sentire career ''Kenneth T Jacksi o^niencjn Historical ReviewOrder FormHere is a form for ordering your book selections by man Indicate the number of books title, and how y< iu wish t pavIf you'd 'ike your book selections sent as a gift anywhere within the U S indicate the name and addres' of the recipient T>book will be gift wrapped, accompanied by a card telling who it's from and sent on its wavtitle QUANTITY UNIT PRICE TOTAL PRICE" ' ——SubtotalOr iois aditr* ■ a -t k enclosed add S. X)[)er shipping addressMasterCard i.EASE SEND THESE BC GIFT FROM MFNameAddressCity State ZipPLEASE SEND A COPY OF UNIVERSITY SELEC TlONS TO MY FPIFNDNameAddressCity State ZfpUniversity of Chicago Bookstore& General Book Department970 East 58th StreetChicago, IL 60637phone (312) 962-7712 SPECIAL OFFERTHE USES OF GOTHICPlanning and Building the One copy of DREAMS IN STONECampus of the University of free with a purchase of more thanChicago, 1892-1932 $ 50 00 worth of books < ine i npvby Jean F Block for S17 50 With a pure base ofThrough four decades of social books worth between $25 00 andchange and shifting architectural $50 00fashion, the University of Chicagoadhered to the Gothic style and the DREAMS IN STONEquadrangular plan The story of the A superb photographic record ofUniversity's architectural develop- the University's architecturement is documented in this $35 00 clothcatalog 225 illustrations Offer qrxxf as long as supple lasts t ut$19 95. paper not later than December 2C> I9K4HYDE PARK HOUSES METROPOLIS 1890-1940An Informal History, 1856-1910 Edited by Anthony Sutcliffeby Jean F Block This collection of essays from sc hoi-Hyde Park-Kenwood. one of ars around the world examines the*Chicago's oldest neighborhoods complex relationship betweenhas a rich tradition of diversity and world urban growth and cityvitality that is reflected in the planning during a period in historyarchitecture of its homes Hundreds dominated by rapid populationof splendid examples of nineteenth- increase, new developments incentury domestic architecture, still mass transportation and dramaticstanding today tell the story of urban expansion An ideal refer-Hyde Park s growth from a pastoral ence and reader for students ofprairie settlement to a thriving urbanism Metropolis 1890-1940urban community H\\1e Pork looks at the policies adopted toHouses serves as broth history deal with the new city expres-,ed irtand guide the art. architecture literature$12 95 cloth cinema, music, and ideology of theBARRY BYRNE AND i Jiscuss cc3,t‘ studies of L()nd( jmJOHN LLOYD WRIGHT Pans Berl • the Ruhr New Yr AArchitecture and Design Moscow arid Tokyo and a pod-by Salley Kitt Chappell & sc ript brings readers up tr fat-Ann van Zanten /nth i • -rvev o' postwar •With an introduction by 107 b/w halftone*- 40 imr U <•/. r ;1 Frank Jewell $40 00 noth■ on of the major . .rr idu< f < if both MORALISM ANDByrne and Wright 't include^ <n THE MODERN HOMEinterpretive essay on each actom- Domestic Architecture andparried by bibliographic guides list- Cultural Conflict in Chicagoof buildings and projects, and more 1873-1913than 70 black-and-white and coir r by Gwendolyn Wrightillustrations, including many ' Not simply another picture bookoriginal drawings selected from the of houses rather (the. book] r .•Chicago Historical Society 's careful study of the dynamic s ofArchitectural Collection 8 color change in ordinary domesticplates. 66 b/w illustrations architecture that pays particular$9 95 paper attention to the (philosophicalDistributed for the social, and economic) context^Chicago Historical Soc letv within which the change oc r urredne^ - Urban Hot, n ftie.i$ 1/50 (Ir >thPATHS OFNEIGHBORHOOD CHANGE CHICAGORace and Crime in Urban America Growth of a Metropolisby Richard P Taub, D Garth Taylor by Harold M Mayer && Jan D Dunham RichardC WadeDe aling with eight Chicago neighnew ' rudy ’ - .v, that ne ,hbor from a frontier sutbovt t<" -rie r ',vntf '.ration and' 1 me areasTHE ROBIE HOUSE OF$25 00 c'otf FRANK LLOYD WRIGHTby Joseph ConnorsCHICAGO AND THE AMERICAN The Pobie House .riChic agi •- eraLITERARY IMAGINATION of the world s most famous house1-by Carl S Smith Built in 1909 10 fra Frederick CChicago's growth in sixty years Robie bicycle manufacturer andfrom frontier outpost to the second automobile designer it is a masterlargest city in America embodied piece from the end of Frank Lloydfor w riters arid artists the* sudden Wright s early period and a classicand even violent transition to what example of the Prairie Housewe call the modern period Among This book describes Robie Housethe themes in Smith's study are the in detail but more than that it triesplace of art in the new city the to discover how the design tookrepresentation of women (like shape m the mind of the architectDreiser 's Sister Carrie and Cathers It uses Wright s own writings rareThea Kronberg) trying to succeed working drawings from the periodon the city's "male" terms and the and previously unpublished photo-conception of businessman as graphs of the house in construeartist Smith analyzes these ways in tion to help the reader look overwhich Chicacjo writers seized upon the shoulder of the architect atthe structures and events of the work The text also includes a longcity—the omnipresent railroad the letter from Wright to the criticlarge buildings in the new One ago Harriet Monroe in 1907 in whichstyled the legendary stockyards, the Wright first expresses hits matureWorld's Columbian Exposition—to philosophy of design Chicagodevelop a new aesthetic vocab 4rchitec ture and Urbanism seriesulary for what they believed the 4 7 b/w halftonescity meant 16 b/w halftones $25 00 cloth $8 95 pape rS26 00 cloth $14 00 paper Fall 1984Prices are subject to changeSELECTIONS