AMYLESEMANN MaroonFriday, November 16, 1984USFCU will reopenfor new membersThe ChicagoVolume 94, No. 21 The University of ChicagoThe delapiaated and warped bowling alley at Ida Noyes will be replaced by a six lanemechanized alley.Ida Noyes plan explainedBilliard room planned, pool revamped, new bowling alleyBy Terry TrojanekIn addition to a new 500 seattheater, projected plans forthe renovation of Ida NoyesHall include a fully mechan¬ized six lane bowling alley,complete revamping of thepool, a billiard room, a newTV lounge, and an elevator.Phase I of the renovation ofIda Noyes Hall is nearly com¬plete, according to LynnBender, Director of PhysicalPlanning and Construction.Phase I consisted mainly ofminor outdoor repair, tuck¬pointing, and repaving andwaterproofing the terraces.Additionally, the women’sphysical education officeswere moved to Bartlett Gym¬nasium and vacated for stu¬dent activities. New firedoors were also constructedwith one leading to the clois¬ter, and another as an exitfrom the Pub. An accessramp for the handicappedwas built for the north en¬trance.Bender hopes to beginPhase II, which includes thenew 500 seat theater, nextsummer. But in spite of a mil¬lion dollar gift to build thetheater, the University hasonly raised half of the fundingnecessary to start Phase II,which will cost an estimated2.2 million.Phase II, in addition to thenew cinema, includes a majorrenovation and reconstruc¬tion of the pool. New separatemen’s and women’s lockerrooms will be built using onlytwenty-five percent of thelocker room. Mechanical sys¬tems for the pool and ventila¬tion and air conditioning forthe theater will be installed.An all-floors elevator will beput in to make the buildingcompletely accessible to thehandicapped.Phase III has no tentativestarting date and will cost 2.5to 3 million dollars. The olddance room in the basementwill be turned into a six lanebowling alley. A billiardroom, T V. lounge, and per¬haps several multi-purposerooms will be constructed inthe space vacated by the oldlocker room, weight roomand old bowling room.Some upgrading is beingconsidered for both Ida’s Cafe and th Pub. This might in¬clude the expansion of Ida’sCafe to upper levels and theuncovering of a skylightabove Ida’s.The building will undergo acomplete overhaul as theheating system is upgraded,as well as most of the electri¬cal wiring. More storage areawill be opened up for thingspresently stored in the open.Almost all of the cleaning andrestoration will be done dur¬ing this phase, includingsome restoration to the muralroom in the theatre on thethird floor. Aside from thetheater and basement, thebasic floor plan will remainthe same. Although some de-By Thomas CoxNobel Laureate RosalynYalow spoke last Tuesday aspart of the University’s Visit¬ing Fellows program. Hertalk covered the history of thediscovery of radioimmunoas¬say and later diverged intothe topics that have made herone of the most controversialof scientists.The radioimmunoassay(RIA) was a development ofresearch Yalow and herteammate Solomon Bersonconducted over many yearsin the fifties and early sixties.RIA applies to a huge numberof medical tests, includingdiagnosis of hepatitis-B, andcongenital hypothyroidism, acondition that causes irre¬versible mental retardation ifuntreated. There are literallythousands of other uses forthe RIA, a process that costsan average of $10 to $100 pertest, according to Yalow.“If you look at the amountof radiation in each of thosetest tubes,” used for RIAtesting, it would take betweenone and 10 million dollarsworth of the contents of thosetubes to be ingested, eaten, topossibly affect a singlethyroid,” Yalow said.She further stressed both molition work will have to bedone for the wiring and heat¬ing, the interior facades anddecoration of Ida Noyes willremain intact.No other major projects areunder consideration by theUniversity at this time, asidefrom the conversion of the re¬cently acquired AmericanBar Association buildingacross the midway. An archi¬tect has been hired to lay outthe building for Universitypurposes including perhaps abase for the ComputationCenter. The University is nowpursuing capital requestsfrom the divisions to decideon any future constructionneeds.the safety of low-level ra¬dioactivity and the need to“put things in their properframework,” by devoting thesecond half of her lecture toan examination of both com¬monly-known facts and theless commonly known back¬ground that would seem tomake such media excitementover radiation unfounded andeven ridiculous.“If we fly above 30,000 feet,we get from half to one mil-lirem (of radiation) per hour.So if you fly from the East toWest Coast and back, you getten times the average expo¬sure of the people living with¬in fifty miles of Three Mile Is¬land at the time of theaccident.”Yalow contends that be¬cause people are not in¬formed what normal radia¬tion exposure is, they cannotreact intelligently to the in¬formation they do receivefrom the media. She addedthat an uninformed public’sconcern leads to political ac¬tion that is not likely to ad¬dress a real issue.An example of this oc¬curred when in 1975 the twostates with nuclear waste dis¬posal sites. North Carolinaand Washington state, closed By Thomas CoxThe University StudentFederal Credit Union(USFCU) may finally be onthe long road to recoveryfrom its problems. When itopened in Jaunary 1984, it hadso many membership appli¬cations that its staff had tostruggle to keep up with theworkload; so much so thatUSFCU decided to open nonew accounts beginning in thefall quarter. That may soonchange.USFCU’s Public RelationsDirector Herb Silverman justannounced that the CreditUnion will soon begin admit¬ting new members. “Our pri¬mary concern is not to disruptthe service of currentmembers,” Silverman said.Applicants will be signing upfor appointments to come andopen their accunts. USFCUadopted this position becausewhile appointments can bemade outside of the confinesof the office, accounts have tobe opened within the CreditUnion’s office for “security-reasons,” according to Silver-man.Ten appointments will beavailable on a given day, sothere will not be a large influxof people into the tiny base¬ment office. The date whenappointments can start beingmade has not yet been an¬nounced.Long lines at the creditunion have been a source ofirritation for members allyear. The USFCU now hasaround 15000 members beingserved by a staff of aroundforty volunteer tellers andboard members. Only twothem in “a political move.”Yalow subsequently testifiedbefore the CongressionalCommittee on Science andTechnology. At that time sheexplained to the committeethat ‘because I am alive. Icontain a tenth of a micro¬curie of carbon-14 and a tenthof a microcurie of potassi¬um-40. If I had received thatamount of radioactivity as aresult of a laboratory experi-continued on page six people are paid at the CreditUnion: a full time bank man¬ager and a man who does theUSFCU’s data entry. Boardmembers receive no compen¬sation for their work either.Last year there were six paidtellers handling the CreditUnion’s work; most studentcredit unions in the countryand all the credit unions inthis area of the country usevolunteer tellers, Silvermansaid.The USFCU was once tout¬ed as “the fastest growingcredit union in the nation.”Ronald Boots, President ofthe Midwest Association ofCredit Unions, said that itsounded as if the manage¬ment was “double-talking, ifthey say on the one hand thatthey’re the fastest growingand on the other that theycan’t take new accounts.” Headded that the freeze on newaccounts was “not wise.” inhis opinion, although hestressed that the USFCU wasnot a member of his associa¬tion: the University StaffCredit Union is.Boots explained that creditunions often start with volun¬teer staff, and that USFCU’sdeclaring a 0% dividend in itsfirst dividend period last year“is not unheard of.” He ex¬plained that the credit unionprobably wanted to reach fi¬nancial stability before de¬claring dividends. In the nextperiod a 5 to 6% dividend wasdeclared.“Things like net income, re¬serves, and the like deter¬mine what sort of dividendsyou declare.” Boots said, ad¬ding that the USFCU’s realproblem may be “that theymay not have qualified peopleto handle growth problems.”Matthew Rouker, Chief ofChartering and Education atthe National Credit Union Ad¬ministration (NCUA), thefederal agency that charteredthe USFCU and insures its de¬posits. described the creditunion as “such a marketingsuccess” and said it was sowell-advertised that they“had a tremendous work¬load” from the moment theyopened their doors in Jan¬uary. 1984.Members’ complaints haveranged from the length oftime they have to wait in lineto the ten-day hold on person¬al checks over $300.Silverman explained thecontinued on page sixINSIDESTRESS SYMPOSIUMP.3MEDIA BLITZGCJ CENTERFOLDBORK LECTUREP.6Yalow says radioactivity notas threatening as reportedTft£MAJOi? Ar > THE UNIVERSITY C,-.t 5706 S. University' tickets available at the rey^.students $$ T. •*, ->>* non-students 10$ *• P < di club bbx officevisa & mastercardaccepted ...2—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984Symposium says less stress is bestPfRt.VIAfc —• * OAPPO* A;** » JSWK'.XIBkOnly fifty freshmen and transfers showed up for a symposium on stress held Tuesday.By Carolyn MancusoHow stressful is a student’s adjust¬ment from high school to the Universi¬ty of Chicago? Is there an adequate, ac¬cessible and receptive network ofpeople available to help students dealwith this stress? A symposium directedtoward new students, held Tuesdaynight in Burton-Judson Hall, tried toanswer these and other questions.Although all freshmen and transferstudents received invitations, onlyabout 50 student attended. Some stu¬dents said that a possible reason for thepoor attendance is that most studentsdo not look in their mail folders. An¬other reason given was the distance orBurton Judson from the other resi¬dence halls. In talking with students,Marlene Richmond, Residence Masterat Burton Judson, discovered thatmany students were “too stressed,’’ ineffect, overloaded with work, to take °time off to attend the symposium. 3The symposium was sponsored by <the Visiting Committee on Student Pro- 2grams and Facilities, a group of Uni- 5versity alumni and friends, chaired by °Katherine Darrow, General Counsel of 5The New York Times, and a 1965 gradu¬ate of the College. Giving presentationsat the discussion were representativesfrom the College advising office, theResidence Halls, Career and Place¬ment Services, and the Student MentalHealth Clinic.Assistant Dean of Students Ralph Ha¬milton stated three reasons for whichthe symposium was being held. Thefirst was to identify in what ways stu¬dents experience and cope with stress,and to pinpoint some common ways inwhich stress can manifest .itself. An¬other goal was to fully explain whatservices the University provides, andwhat roles the Resident Masters andResident Heads play in the overall sup¬port system. A third reason centeredaround the post-presentation informalquestion and answer period which gavestudents the opportunity to offer sug¬gestions on ways in which the existingservices can be improved.Hamilton noted that the symposiumwas being held now, rather than duringOrientation Week, because during those first few weeks of school studentsare already bombarded with more in¬formation than they can feasibly ab¬sorb. Hamilton also remarked thatsince most students are just now recov¬ering from their first set of mid-terms,this is an ideal time to discuss methodsof dealing with stress.Students’ comments after the sympo¬sium were generally very positive. Onestudent observed that the personal ex¬perience analogies made by membersof the audience,which illustrated dif¬ferent ways of coping with stress, weremore interesting than the factual infor¬mation provided throughout the pre¬sentation. The same student, however,made the statement that some of thepanelists “said some things as if theyknew me and were talking right tome.’’A freshman in the College, MaryLynne Bircke, remarked that the pan¬elists were “very imformative,’’ andthat it was “a shame that more stu¬ dents didn’t come.” Those sentimentswere echoed by several others present.Bircke also noted that the symposiumrevealed (to her) some support ser¬vices that she previously had not knowexisted. Matt Natt and Ingrid Booth,both first-year students, pointed outthat the availability of sympathetic re¬sources within the College is notstressed as strongly as it could be. Bothagreed that more emphasis could beplaced on the helpfulness and availabil¬ity of the staff at the Student MentalHealth Clinic, the Resident Mastersand Resident Heads, and the collegeadvisors.Katherine Darrow noted that stressis an ongoing problem, not one connect¬ed just with being a college freshman.She added that, “Stress isn’t just aproblem of the first year...it doesn’t goaway...stress accompanieschange...it's a phenomenon of ourlives.”Another important point, brought up by several members of the audience inthe post-presentation discusson, is thatalthough the administration is eager tolisten, students are reluctant to utilizecertain services. Many students agreedthat this is due in part to the stigma at¬tached to going to a Mental Health Clin¬ic, and a prevalent attitude that person¬al problems will either clearthemselves up with time, or can besolved entirely without help. Many peo¬ple pride themselves on this self-suffi¬ciency, even if it results in inner tur¬moil.Dr. Peter Johnston, director of theStudent Mental Health Clinic, made aninteresting observation during his partof the presentation. He said that stu¬dents who confront and work out theirproblems by discussing them withsomeone else. (be it a friend, a counsel¬or at the Clinic, your resident head oryour advisor), have a higher rate ofmatriculation than students who keepeverything bottled up inside of them.Special 4-Course Thanksgiving Dinner $9953:00 to 8:30 p.m.• Lentil orOld Fashioned Cabbage Soup• Vegetable Salad with Loaf ofHoney-Wheat Bread • Turkey, BBQ Skirt Steak or a FreshSeafood Special served withButternut Squash, Stuffing andCranberry Sauce. • Choose from an array of ourHomemade Pastries55th and Hyde Park Boulevard 643-5500Mom won’t ,let you bringthe gang homefor Thanksgiving?Orly’s Will!The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984—3SG foulupTo the editor:I wish to respond to Tim Wong’s let¬ter of November 9. As one of the lawschool’s representatives to the Asse¬mbly, a member of the Finance Com¬mittee, and the one who filed suit in theSFA court to compel the Elections andRules Committee to re-run the SFAelection, I assume that I am a target, ifnot the target of Mr. Wong’s invective.Mr. Wong appropriately urged all stu¬dents to participate in SG and compli¬mented Chris Hill and Brad Smith fortheir worthy efforts. Unfortunately, bywriting a diatribe against those “bring¬ing inconsequential cases to the SFACourt,” and those who can “regurgi¬tate Roberts’ Rules,” Mr. Wongevinces a disturbing desire to stiflethose who defend the representationalprinciples that are supposed to governthe SG. It is rather puzzling to me thata man who is evidently devoted to anentity created by the Student Constitu¬tion could trivialize attempts to forceSG to conform to that document’s pre¬scriptions. I consider his argumentsseriatum.(1)THE ‘7-WANT-TO-GO-TO-COURTSYNDROMEMr. Wong’s main point seems to bethat SG is overburdened by proceduralchallenges which tend to impede its ef¬forts to improve campus life. This isnot a worthless point, but Mr. Wong does not discriminate between meri¬torious and frivolous uses of the Court.The sad product of his reasoning is thatwe who suffer a deprivation of rightsought not to have redress. Can he real¬ly mean that SG should be so “re¬vered” that its pronouncements andprocedures should escape even cursoryscrutiny? The purpose of the SFACourt is to adjudicate the claims of stu¬dents who feel that the other branch,the Assembly, acted improperly indenying them of benefits or rights.Only the most unabashed party cadrewould openly dispute the propriety ofexercising ones right to seek reme¬dies.Mr. Wong conveniently makes nomention of the facts of my “inconse¬quential” case. This indicates to methat he either does not know them, oruses the word “inconsequential” disin-genously. I sued because the Electionsand Rules Committee decided to fill va¬cancies on the Court without properlynotifying the rest of us that there werevacancies to fill. They neither adver¬tised in accordance with the Constitu¬tion’s proscribed procedures, nor re¬ported the vacancies to the Assemblyas they are required to do. See ArticleVIII, 2 (b) and (c). The result of thislack of notice was a ballot without can¬didates: two vacancies, two write-inspots. As the representative of the lawschool, I was entitled to fight for myconsituents; to fain for them access tothe one office in SG that is remotely re¬lated to their academic endeavors. I resent the charge that I sued because I“enjoy the fun and frolic of the quasi-legal world.” I have plenty of fun as itis in the real world, thank you.(2)THE FINANCE COMMITTEE'S LACKOF ENTHUSIASM.Mr. Wong again is angry becausesomeone, God forbid, refuses to tow theline. SG wanted to hold a semiformaldance during ninth week at a consider¬able expense. The committee felt thatthis would have been an imprudent rsikof student funds since it doubted SG’sability to attract subsantial numbers ofstudents at such a late date. There wasroom for reasonable disagreement onthe subject, but SGFC’s falure to “co¬operate” was not due to obstructive¬ness. The committee later approvedfunding for an alternative semiformal,to be held at an earlier, more sensibledate. (3)THE REAL THREAT TO SGMr. Wong charges that SG is indanger of “withering away” becauseof the dilatory efforts of assemblymentwho “regurgitate Roberts’ Rules” and“blithely spend their Friday eveningsanalyzing parliamentary procedure.”Mr. Wong, I assure you that I do not sospend my weekends: I already knowthe rules. Perhaps it is those who seemunable to function effectively in the As¬sembly who ought to consider a littleextra-curricular reading. The problemwith Mr. Wong’s argument is that isimplies that those who devote time toBeware of ‘psychological warfare’By John ConlonThe recent upsurge of US militaryactivity in and around Nicaragua isfrightenly reminiscent of similar ma¬neuvers preceding US interventions inGuatemala (1954), Chile (1973), andGrenada (1983). In all of these cases,the United States gradually escalatedcovert destabilization of an existinggovernment until its direct overthrowbecame feasible. Harassment contin¬ued until the people, utterly trauma¬tized, just wanted it all to end. The CIAhas a term for this kind of operation:Psychological Warfare.US hostility toward Guatemala start¬ed in the mid 1940s, when Guatemala’sfirst democratically elected president,Juan Jose Arevalo, began encouragingunionization in US-owned factories andplantations. Jacobo Arbenz Guzman,elected president in 1950, expropriateduncultivated lands of the United FruitCompany, with compensation, inMarch of 1953. In August of that year,the Eisenhower Administration beganto plot Arbenz’ overthrow (BitterFruit, Schlesinger and Kinzer, 1982;pp. 76, 108).The United States had refused to sellarms to Guatemala beginning in 1948,and had pressured other governmentsto do likewise. US officials were espe¬cially concerned to prevent Guatemalafrom obtaining anti-aircraft shells. AsUS plans to overthrow Arbenz ma¬tured, Guatemala secretly purchased ashipload of military equipment fromCzechoslovakia. The Eisenhower Ad¬ministration, anxious to justify its hos¬tility toward Guatemala, denouncedthe Czech arms shipment as a “devel¬opment of gravity,” maintaining thatthe arms shipment “exceeded” Guate¬mala’s “legitimate” needs. This is a time when the United States was plan¬ning the overthrow of Arbenz (ibid, pp.148, 152).The Eisenhower Administration nowstepped up its efforts to terrorize thepopulation and leaders of Guatemala.It issued threats of military interven¬tion, and hinted at a possible blockadeof Guatemala. And it created an“army of liberation” to attack Guate¬mala from bases in Honduras (ibid, p.159).At the same time, the CIA was work¬ing with internal opponents of the gov¬ernment to increase the atmosphere oftension. It contacted GuatemalanArchbishop Mariano Rossell Arellanowho, in April 1954, urged the people ofGuatemala to “rise as a single managainst this enemy of God andcountry.” The CIA air-dropped thou¬sands of leaflets carrying the Arch¬bishop’s message into remote parts ofthe country (ibid p. 155).On June 2nd a plot against the gov¬ernment was uncovered. The next daya group of high-ranking military of¬ficers, at the US ambassador’s urging,pressured Arbenz to dismiss commu¬nists who held posts in the administra¬tion. Clandestine CIA broadcastsbegan spreading rumors that Arbenzwas planning to disband the armedforces and create a people’s militia. OnJune 5th, a retired chief of staff of theGuatemalan airforce fled in a smallplane and joined the CIA’s “liberationarmy.” On June 8th, citing the threatof invasion, Arbenz won congressionalapproval to suspend constitutionalguarantees. At least one US officialhad previously suggested driving Ar¬benz to increasing acts of repression,estranging him from his people andsetting off an internal revolt (ibid pp. 156, 165, 168).As the final push approached, theUnited States began to conduct air at¬tacks against Guatemalan cities. Itwas thus clear why the Eisenhower Ad¬ministration had prevented Guatema¬la’s purchase of anti-aircraft shells:they would have allowed Guatemala todefend herself against just such at¬tacks.Demoralized by the air attacks,army officers friendly to Arbenz askedhim to step down, hoping to placate theUnited States. The Eisenhower Admin¬istration, still not satisfied, continuedits attacks until these relatively liberalofficers also left the government. Theywere ultimately replace by the depend¬ably right wing “liberator” Carlos Cas¬tillo Armas, hand-picked by the Eisen¬hower Administration in 1953. His rulebegan a thirty-year period (which stillcontinues) of government violence thathas, perhaps, exceeded that of anyother country in Latin America.Chile was different from Guatemala.The United States didn’t create a “lib¬eration” army or conduct air attacksagainst Chile. Instead, over six milliondollars were poured covertly into thatcountry to encourage oppositiongroups to harass a democraticallyelected Marxist President, SalvadorAllende (according to the 1975 Congres¬sional report Covert Action in Chile).This harassment, together with a pre¬cipitous drop in the price of copper(Chile’s principle export), and Al-lende’s inexperience in government,created a situation of extreme tensionand chaos. The United States was ableto further aggravate this crisis, notonly by preventing off all bilateralloans and assistance, but also by pre¬venting multilateral institutions suchas the World Bank from making loansto Chile. The United States did continueaid to the Chilean military, however. InSeptember 1973, that military tookpower in one of the most bloody coupsin Chilean history.Grenada differs from Guatemalaand Chile in its tiny size and population(110,000). US threats against Grenadamust therefore have had an even moreterrorizing effect than in Guatemala.In October 1981 the United States con¬ducted a massive naval exercise in theCaribbean, including a mock invasionof “Amber” and the “Amberdines” aclear reference to Grenada and theGrenadines. The exercise involved arescue of Americans on Amber. InMarch 1983, Reagan attacked Grenadain a nationally televised speech, whichthe United States motives to the con¬struction of an airport, which the Unit¬ed States has now, after the invasion,completed. It is likely that the constantpressure which the United States ex¬erted on Grenada, together with possThe 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 EditorFrank ConnollyAssociate News EditorRosemary BlinnManaging Editor Dennis ChanskySports EditorJulie WeissmanFeatures EditorThomas CoxAssociate EditorAlexandra ConroyAssociate EditorPhil PollardPhotograph/ Editor Craig FarberCopy EditorWally DabrowskiProduction ManagerBruce KingGrey City Journal EditorLisa CypraAdvertising Manager Tina EllerbeeBusiness ManagerJaimie WeihrichOffice ManagerLeslie RigbyChicago Literary Review EditorDavid SullivanChicago Literary Review EditorStaff: Karen E. Anderson, Paul Beattie, Scott Bernard, Mark Blocker, Anthony Cash-man, Arthur U. Ellis, Paul Flood, Ben Forest, John Gasiewski, Cliff Grammich,Keith Horvath, Jim Jozefowicz, Larry Kavanagh, A1 Knapp, John Kotz, MarciaLehmberg, Amy Leseman, Armin Lilienfeld, Jane Look, Mike Lotus, L.D. Lurvey,Helen Markey, Melissa Mayer, Karin Nelson, Ciaran OBroin, Jim Pretlow, Ravi Raj-mane, Matt Schaefer, Geoff Sherry, Jeff Smith, Steve Sorensen, Rick Stabile, JimThompson, Hilary Till, Bob Travis, Terry Trojanek.Contributors: Bob Koltay, Carolyn Mancuso, Larry Peskin.4—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984 become well versed in the rules thatgovern the Assembly do their const-tuents a disservee by being too skillful.The real threat to SG is that not enoughattention is paid to the rules which,when properly enforced, provide for ef¬ficient, orderly and, most importantly,fair meetings.This last point seems to haveescaped Mr. Wong. He trivializes chal¬lenges to “procedural irregularities”but, if these went unchallenged,members would lose their rights tospeak and to vote. For example, therules provide that the only way to enddebate on a question is by a two thirdsvote. If the chair were to “forget” thisprovision, debate would be premature¬ly stifled. This would operate to denythose who disagree (those with whomMr. Wong is uniformly unconcerned)an opportunity to persuade the majori¬ty to change its mind. I will always riseon a point of order when such violationsoccur.Fortunately, Chris Hill, the presidentof SG does not share Mr. Wong’s antip¬athy for democratic procedure. Ratherthan attack those who seek to protectminority rights, the president took theconstructive step of requesting the ap¬pointment of a parliamentarian; onewho could preside confident in hisknowledge of the rules. It is to Chris’credit that he put himself firmly be¬hind representational principles in¬stead of questioning the rights of thosewho happen to disagree with him. Mr.Wong should do the same and not labelible US attempts to split the Grenadianleadership, aggravated the divisionswithin the New Jewel Movement.These divisions led to the death ofMaurice Bishop, which provided theUnited States with a pretext for its sub¬sequent invasion.Now let’s turn to Nicaragua. As inGuatemala and Grenada, U.S. hostilitystems from the overthrow of a rightwing dictator whom the United Statesgovernment considered a “friend.” Asin Guatemala and Chile, the UnitedStates is undoubtedly funneling mil¬lions of dollars to the'internal opposi¬tion in Nicaragua, while denouncing(and grossly exaggerating) Nicara¬guan “repression.” As in Chile, theUnited States has actively sought to cutoff international loans to Nicaragua,whose economy was devastated in thewar against the Somoza dictatorship.The covert war, of course, is alsodraining the Nicaraguan economy. Asin Guatemala, the United States is cri¬ticising Nicaragua’s defense buildup atthe same time that it attacks thatcountry militarily. And as in all threeprevious interventions, the increadiblesize of th United States compared to Ni¬caragua (one hundred times the popu¬lation) intensifies the level of terrorcreated by U.S. threats.The latest provocations against Ni¬caragua, including the accusation ofSoviet Mig shipments (which werelater retracted) and the sonic boomsset off by US surveillance jets over fiveNicaraguan cities, is a frighteningescalation of US pressure on thatcountry. The Chicago Tribune (Nov13), described these steps as the begin¬ning of a “tough new policy of deliber¬ate intimidation and harassment.”Other measures planned include“Threats to interdict arms — carryingSoviet or East bloc ships,” new effortsto fund the 15,000 “contras” attackingNicaragua from Honduras, and an in¬creased level of military maneuvers inHonduras and the Caribbean. The ad¬ministration also wants to “prevent theSandinistas from building up new mili¬tary capabilities for fighting the con¬tras,” the Tribune reported. “Buildingpsychological pressure” is also one ofthe goals the Administration men¬tioned.No one can predict the future. Never¬theless, it seems clear that the UnitedStates would like either to push theSandinistas into increasingly repres¬sive policies, or in some other waycreate a pretext for further U.S. ag¬gression. As long as this is not recog¬nized by the American people, Reagancan’t lose. The Administration is usingeach crisis in Nicaragua as an excuseto escalate its attacks, thereby pushingNicaragua into its next crisis. The Rea¬gan Administration could in this wayconvince decent Americans to supporta war which, if they weren’t manipu¬lated, they would strenuously oppose.sincere efforts to ensure democraticprocedures as “silly games.”Mr. Wong’s ad hominem attack onthose who exercise rights guaranteedthem reveals a disturbing lack of re¬spect for procedures which protectrights. Would he, in his zeal to accom¬plish the meritorious aim of puttingcriminals in prison, sacrifice the prin¬cipled safeguards which protect the ac¬cused from illegitimate and unfair ex¬ercises of state power? If not, then heought not to ridicule those who try torepresent their constituencies to thefullest by using the means available todefend every constituent’s rights. Pre¬sumably his own Assembly representa¬tive would do no less. Good lord HARold!UIWAT THE HELL HAP¬PENED TO YOU? IfrATi ONSr pom't know bypon,XT's LIKE X HAD Tostudy for a midtermBut x just couldn'tstay awake./ COFFEE, SPEED . .. XTRIED it All , YETN0THIN6 LiORKED...Finally, x became50 DESPERATE.../The “drink and be merry” term paperBy Rick StabileJames GeolyThird-year law studentNES article biasedTo the editor,Let me identify myself. My name isMichele White and I am a 1982 politicalscience graduate from the Universityof Chicago. For the 1984 General Elec¬tion, I was also the Illinois State Man¬ager for the News Election Service.Your reporter, Jeff Smith, in an ap¬palling breach of journalistic integrity,does not identify himself. He was, infact, my predecessor — the 1982 IllinoisState Manager for NES.I am surprised that the Maroon edi¬tors did not recognize that his No¬vember 13 story “How you know Rea¬gan won” was written by an NESinsider with an ax to grind. Smithjumped his NES contract to work forthe local TV news operation that unsuc¬cessfully “tried to get the jump on re¬turns in the spring primary.”Rather than quibble with Smith’s fac¬tual errors and his fixation with theNES God, I’d like to point out some in¬ternal inconsistencies in his logic.Smith asserts that “NES precinct re¬turns have an oddly pointless quality.”Taking the media’s quest for immedi¬ate election results as a given, NESprecinct reporting provides an impor¬tant back-up to the networks’ otheranalysis. Smith admits later in his ar¬ticle. but only as an aside in parenthe-continued on page six The Byline“Hey Jay, do you want to go to themovies tonight?”“Not tonight, Joan—I have a paper towrite...”Stop, hold it right there, Jay—don’tyou realize you’re missing a great op¬portunity here (a free movie)? And forwhat? A paper. Jay, why do you wantto put yourself through all the drudgeryof writing a paper tonight? Just for adecent grade?Don’t you know that there are manymethods that make paper-writing aneasy and enjoyable experience? Anyformer student of Intro to Humanities,the class where you get to write a 5 to 10page paper every week, knows aboutthese methods— he’s originated andtried quite a few.The easiest method would be not toeven try to write the paper—act as ifyou don’t even have it hanging overyour head (like a guillotine blade). Jay,go to the movies with Joan, even if youhate her guts—at least you won’t bewriting a paper. The one glaringly ob¬vious flaw to this method is that it isgenerally agreed that “I” is a ratherugly letter—especially when it appearson a transcript.A related method would be the “let’sdo some necessary maintenance first”method. First, clear everything exceptyour lamp off your desk. This can beeasily accomplished by lifting the lamp with one hand, and, with one full swoop(and the other hand), wiping every¬thing from your desk into the five-foothigh pile next to it. Then do all the stuffnecessary to maintain yourself andyour dorm room. Do things like clean¬ing your windows, picking lint out frombetween your toes, riding your bikeeven though it’s 15 below, recoveringfrom the cold you caught while ridingyour bike, murdering your roommate(before he murders you), etc. Betweenthese acts, you can place the book, apiece of paper, and a pen on your desk,and, if you’re really motivated, you canwrite a sentence or two of your paper.Don’t worry about having to write thepaper, though—by the time you’re outof maintenance, you’ll have to startover. You’ll still probably get that ugly“I” on your transcript, but at least youcan say that you tried, and you’ll havedone a lot of stuff you had to do any¬how.These two methods are good, butthey don’t actually meet their objec¬tive-writing a complete paper. Theyalso lack ingenuity— anyone can wastetime. That’s why I advocate the “drinkand be merry” method. It involves alittle investment, though, and it helps ifyou know how to type. What you do isset up your desk with typewriter andpaper, as if you were seriously going towrite the paper. Put a fifth of dark rum and a full shot-glass on the desk, out ofthe way of the carriage return. Starttyping your first paragraph. Wheneveryou get stuck, take a long, yearninglook at the full shot-glass and think,”I’ll drink it when I finish this para¬graph.” When you do finish it, drinkand refill your glass. Now continue typ¬ing, and after you finish every thirdsentence drink and re-fill. If you losecount, finish your current sentence,drink, and re-fill. When you finish thepaper, polish off the bottle and passout.The “drink and be merry” methodhas several advantages—1) you pain¬lessly finish something that you mightbe able to pass off as a paper; 2) therum motivates you to continue writing;3) the rum lets your creative juicesflow easier (you’ve probably alreadyheard that rum goes great with juicesof all sorts); and 4) you’ve typed yourpaper without writing a first draft oranything. The only problem with thismethod is getting reincarnated the nextmorning in order to hand the paper in.“Hey Joan, do you want to come overand help me write a paper tonight in¬stead of going to the movies?”“What method are you using?”“The drink and be merry’ meth¬od...”“All right! I’d love to help you out.”MANDATORYMaroon Staff Meeting1 st Floor of Ida Noyes - Cloister ClubFOOD SundayNovember 18that7 p.m. FOODWe will elect an editor —Framework.—For Thinkers.Available Now! $520.00Framework, by Ashton-Tate, works the waypeople do. Ail of Framework’s functionsare available at the same time, becausepeople think about more than one thing ata time. It’s fully integrated; there is no needto stop word processing in order to workwith a spreadsheet or database In addition,a unified command set allows you to be anexpert in all functions once you learn onefunction. Simple menus and a comprehen¬sive help library help you get startedTest it yourself!You cannot understand the ease with whichall of the functions of Framework fit to¬gether without testing it yourself So, Aca¬demic Computing Group is making avail¬able demo versions of Framework for S5(incl. S&H, refundable upon purchase ofFramework from us.) The demo gives you achance to see how outlining, word process¬ing, spreadsheet, graphics, data manage¬ment, telecommunications and DOS accessmake the computer an extension of yourthought processes, freeing you from the pet¬ty tasks and allowing you to concentrate onbeing creative.Disk-interest!From time to time Academic ComputingCroup will offer to its customers a specialdeal called disk-interest. This offer is inresponse to the fact that software is neveravailable when it is promised We feel thatthe customer should not be left to wait...empty-handed and with a smaller bank ac¬count That is why we will send you a freediskette for every two weeks that you mustwait. (This offer is only applicable to thosepackages which we designate You must payin full for the software in order to qualifyDisk-interest begins to accrue on the daywe receive your order)Microsoft Word:ETA is December 15Price is S160 Disk-interest available!Academic Computing Group. Inc.mP O Box 255Bensenville. IL 60106We accept personal checks with UCID, moneyorders and certified checks, VISA A MasterCardCredit card purchases arc required to furnish bill¬ing address, expiration date and signature. Mini¬mum credit order is $20 amma* i1The Chicago Maroon—Friday. November 16, 1984—5Bork says court’s approach to religion likely to changeBy Ciaran ObroinUS Circuit Court Judge Robert Borksaid Tuesday, that the Supreme Court’sapproach to religion is destined to bechanged. Bork, rumored to be a topcandidate for a Reagan Supreme Courtposition, presented a lecture entitled“Religion and Politics,” sponsored bythe John M. Olin Center.Edward Levi, former attorney gener¬al and former U of C president, intro¬duced Bork as a “University of Chicagoproduct.” Bork received his B.A. fromthe College in 1948, and his law degreein 1953.Bork began with the assertion thatthe establishment of reigion clause andthe free exercise of religion clause ofthe First Amendment of the Constitu¬tion often conflict because of the expan¬sive interpretation given them. Theclause reads, “Congress shall make nolaw respecting the establishment of re¬ligion, or prohibiting the free exercisethereof.”The courts presently use a three-partrule to determine whether a legislativeact contravenes the establishmentclause. A legislative act must have asecular purpose, in principle neitheradvance nor inhibit religion, and notfoster an excessive government entan¬glement in religion. The free exerciseclause, as Bork phased it, is concernedwith “regulations of conduct not aimedat religion, but which just happen totouch it.”Bork gave as an example the case ofWisconsin v. Gilbert. In this case, theCourt, citing the free exercise clause,made an exception for the Amish to therule of compulsory education until theCredit unioncontinued from page onehold on checks to the members throughhis member newsletter, and he nowclaims the average wait in line is nomore than five minutes. He said hewent and stood in line himself at dif¬ferent times to see if the complaints hewas hearing were valid. He blames thesize of the office for many USFCUproblems, including this one.Tellers’ mistakes do occur. Silver-man concedes, but said the importantthing was that when they occur, “wetake care of them as soon as they arebrought to our attention.” He also ad¬mitted that they were not the “fastestcontinued from page fivesis, that in pre-NES days, before the ne¬tworks had NES precinct data, onenetwork showed “Goldwater winningthe 1964 California primary while an¬other, counting different precincts,showed Rockefeller winning.” NESprecinct reporting may be “brute-forcenumber-crunching,” but it does pro¬vide a necessary alternative base foranalysis.Smith’s gleeful contention that “NESfell flat in Illinois this last time out”shows an amazing lack of understand¬ing of Illinois election reporting comingfrom a former NES Illinois State Man¬ager. NES reporting can only be as fastand accurate as county vote tabulationsystems are. Cook, Fayette, Kankakee,Madison, and St. Clair are the only ofIllinois’ 102 counties that count ballotsat the precinct level and are thus avail¬able for precinct reporting. Smithshould know that he can not compareIllinois to other states where his “point¬less” precinct reporting is possible inmost counties. Smith’s conclusion,therefore, that early election night,“only about half as much of Illinois wascounted, on average, as should havebeen” is simply not true.At any rate, NES members — ABC,CBS, NBC, AP and UPI had no com¬plaints about NES Illinois electionnight reporting. I suggest that Mr.Smith stop parading as an objectivejournalist and find more constructiveways to deal with his bitterness.Thank you.Michele WhiteGerman studyTo the editor:The article about opportunities foroverseas study in last Friday’s Maroonomitted reference to German-speaking age of 16. Had the state of Wisconsinmade this exception with a statute,Bork pointed out, it would have been inviolation of the establishment clausebecause it would advance religion.The reason for this broad interpreta¬tion of the two clauses, hypothesizedBork, “is based on similar trends inother areas of Constitutional law” suchas obscenity, pornography, and right toprivacy. In these areas, the courts haveaccomplished “a privatization of mo¬rality”. In effect, it leaves “the judge¬ment or morality to the individual.” Bork believes this is not what thefounding fathers of the Constitution hadin mind when they wrote it. “The doc¬trine of the three part test now in use bythe Supreme Court simply is not usefulto enforce the values underlined in theestablishment clause,” he comment¬ed.The main thrust of Bork’s lecturewas that a recasting of the SupremeCourt’s three-prong doctrine is immi¬nent. Because of “an insurgence of thepolitical assertiveness of religiousgroups,” an increase in litigation has resulted. The number of cases pertain¬ing to religion before the SupremeCourt has increased dramatically.Bork saw this as proof that current Sur-peme Court interpretation is unsatis¬factory.In regard to a new court doctrine,Bork said “the best a judge can do isattempt to discern the core of the valuethat the framers attempted to guardand apply it as best he can to today’sworld. Finally, the world wouldn’tchange very much if there was somerelaxation of these doctrines.”Crerar makes strange demands in willBy Bob KoltayAt some point between now and theend of the year, the Crerar Corporationthat has overseen the Crerar Libraryproject for nearly a hundred years willbe dissolved, and its assets transferredto the University.The Crerar Library has had manytemporary homes over the years. Forseveral decades the library was locat¬ed downtown, at the corner of Ran¬dolph and Michigan. During the I950’sthe library began to concentrate its col¬lections on science and technology, andabout 1962 entered into a complex con¬tractual arrangement with the IllinoisInstitute of Technology to maintain it.When this arrangement became nolonger desirable for IIT the contractwas broken with the required notice,and the Crerar board of directorsbegan searching for a new and perma¬nent home for the library, as had beenthe wish of John Crerar.growing” any more; they haven’tgrown since September. Silverman isexpecting about 500 new accounts to beopened in the coming months, some¬thing he says gives them a good chanceof recapturing the title.Silverman criticized members fortreating the USFCU as an adversary,especially when the credit union existsto serve its members. “It’s not themagainst the establishment. We’re all init together,” he said.The USFCU is the single largest stu¬dent credit union in the country, ac¬cording to Silverman, who said thatother universities have been contact¬ing the USFCU and using it as a blue¬print for their own planned opera¬tions.countries. Although there is not yet aformal agreement with any single Ger¬man, Austrain, or Swiss institution, anumber of students have spent as muchas a year abroad. In one instance with¬in the past three years, a student whohad carefully planned a course of studybefore leaving was able to earn theequivalent of almost two years’ workby gaining credit for second-year lan¬guage and by preparing himself to earnadditional credit for third-year lan¬guage courses by taking accreditationexaminations — all in addition to creditfor courses in other disciplines.Because German at the U of C is oneof the most heavily populated coursescontrary to enrollment patterns in theUS in general — it is important for stu¬dents to be aware that study abroadunder the auspices of well-organizedprograms of academic integrity is adistinct possibility. A number of goodprograms are available, includingthose offered by Davidson College inMarburg, Heidelberg College, and theUniversity of Massachusetts. At thistime, two students that I know of arestudying in Freiburg with the U Massprogram. Students seeking primarilyto enhance language skills have manyopportunities to study in Germany andAustria under the auspices of theGoethe Institute and the DeutscherAkademischer Austauschdienst. It ispossible that a formal program be¬tween U of C and specific institutionswill become available, but in the mean¬time, there are many opportunitiesavailable already. Interested studentsmay contact Ms. Martin, members ofthe department of Germanics, or Su¬zanne Ivester in the office of the dean ofstudents in the college.Robert D. Hummel, ChairmanDept. Germanic Languagesand Literatures This final home for Crerar was foundhere at the U of C, once University offi¬cials concluded that the stipulations inCrerar’s will could be met and that thelibrary would be an enhancement tothe University. Though the U of C hasalways placed the greatest emphasison the pure sciences, faculty membershave welcomed the addition ofCrerar’s substantial collections in theapplied sciences.The Crerar will stipulations include,among other details, that the buildingis to be “tasteful, substantial and fire¬proof, and that a sufficient fund be re¬served over and above the cost of itsconstruction to provide, maintain andsupport a library for all time.Also,“...dirty French novels and allBy Larry PeskinSonny Okosun, a leading African mu¬sician, will bring his distinctive soundto the U of C Saturday, November 17thin a Major Activities Board <MAB>sponsored concert at Mandel Hall.HMel Latke-Hamentash SymposiumThe B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation atthe University of Chicago will hold its38th Latke-Hamentash Symposium at7:30p.m. Tuesday, November 20, in theCloister Club on the first floor of IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 East 59th St.The public is invited without ticketand without charge.The Latke-Hamentash Symposium is“a joke in an academic environ¬ment.”Participants, all University facultymembers, relate the importance oflatkes versus hamentashen to theirown academic disciplines.Participants include:Irene Conley, Director of Student Ac¬tivities;Professor Robert W. Fogel, CharlesR. Walgreen Professor and DirectorCenter for Population Economics,Business School and Economics Dept.Professor Ralph W. Nicholas, Depu¬ty Provost, Anthropology Departmentand Social Sciences in College.Professor Herman L. Sinaiko, Deanof Students in College and HumanitiesDivision and College.Yalowcontinued from page onement and I were a laboratory animal,and I died unrelated to the experiment,I could not be buried, burned, or other¬wise disposed of. I would have to bepacked into a box, inside of anotherbox, and shipped cross country to need¬lessly occupy a nuclear waste disposalsite.”Her testimony “brought down thehouse,” she said, and the Nuclear Reg¬ulatory Commission (NRC) moved“rapidly, for a regulatory agency,”and determined how much of the dis¬posal sites were taken up by these low-level materials, as Well as how radio¬active they were. The amount ofradioactive hydrogen came out to beone percent of the naturally occurringradioactive hydrogen to be found in therainfall of New York City. The amountof radioactive carbon-14 found was“less than 5% of that in the garbagecollected in New York City, let alonethe garbage not collected.” Yet half ofthe yearly additional volume of the dis¬posal sites was taken up by that sort oflow-level radioactive material. Butwhen the NRC relaxed its regulationson disposal of lah animals, they did not skeptical trash and works of question¬able moral tone shall never be found inthis library.”It is also stipulated that the librarybe accessible to the public and cor¬porate members. To this end, Crerar isopen to the public during normal busi¬ness hours (8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.) Mondaythrough Saturday. Public access is li¬mited to the first floor where materialscan be paged from the stacks. Borrow¬ing privilges are not extended to thepublic, and in fact, numerous textscannot be checked out at all.According to Patricia Swanson, As¬sistant Director for Science Libraries;Crerar is a publicly available but pri¬vately endowed library with a “publicspirited mission.”Besides the Okosun concert, MAB isplanning a tenth week dance with anas-yet unannounced band. In additionthey are looking forward to bringingWyndon Marsalis, a jazz as well asclassical trumpeter, to campus inApril.Okosun, a self-taught guitarist,drummer and pianist from Nigeria,has created a unique style by unitingmany different types of Black music.This style has been described as a high-life Afrobeat funk fusion interspersedwith reggae. By making reggae into animportant element of his style Okosunhas united black music from Africawith that of Jamaica.The political nature of Okosun’slyrics has often caused controversy.Lyrics such as “We want to know whoowns the land...so we can rule fromCape Town to Cairo” reflect his strongBlack African nationalistic stance, asdoes the title of his new Americanalbum, “Liberation.” Okosun’s otheralbum titles include “Ozzidi,” thename of his first band, and “Papa’sLand.”“The Okosun concert should be a funshow,” according to Ruth Pennington,a member of the M.A.B, “he is a typeof act we don’t usually have.” She alsoadded that Rolling Stone Magazine hasawarded Okosun’s new album fourstars.Tickets for Saturday’s concert are $5for students and $10 for non-students.include any mention of the litter insuch an animal’s cage; that litter muststill receive special disposal.When speaking at a breakfast withBenton fellowsand three Maroon edi¬tors Tuesday morning, Yalow concen¬trated her comments on media report¬ing of science. She described themedia’s attitude as a “disease of themonth” and “carcinogen of themonth” approach that fails to educatethe public about the facts on issues likeman-made mutagenic materials.She said that such materials, likedioxin, have received a great deal ofunwarranted publicity. The brown ma¬terial on toast and the charred materi¬al on steaks is a powerful mutagen;sixty to seventy percent of humancancers are traceable to such naturallyoccurring mutagens. No more than tenpercent is related to man-made toxins.But the bulk of publicity is on the man¬made substances, Yalow contended.The public attention to AIDS (auto¬immune deficiency syndrome) was un¬warranted, Yalow said at the break¬fast. Especially since the population atrisk was so small, the disease so diffi¬cult to transmit, and the transmissionprocess so well known. Media sciencecoverage had not made that clear, shesaid.MAB presents Sonny Okosuns6—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984LECTURE NOTESLawrence Stager, Near Eastern Lan¬guages and CivilizationsTuesday, 3:30 p.m.SS 302Stager will lecture on “Archeology ofthe Family in Early Israel.” This ispart of the U of C Jewish Studies Work¬shop.* * *Dr. John p. Maier, Physikalish-Chemisches Institut, Basel, Switzer¬landMonday, 4 p.m.HGS 101Maier, sponsored by the departmentof chemistry, will give a talk on the“Spectroscopic studies of open-shellPolyatomic cations.* * *Anthony Gatenby of the Plant BreedingInstitute, Cambridge, EnglandTuesday, 4-5 p.m.CISC 101Gatenby will discuss, “Plant SubunitAssembly and Signal Sequence Recog¬nition in Micro-Organisms.” The lec¬ture will be preceded by refreshmentsat 3:45 in room 151.* * *Glauci P. Tocchini-Valentini, Universi¬ty of RomeTuesday, 4-5 p.m.CLSC101The department of molecular gene¬tics and cell biology presents Tocchini-Valentini lecturing on “Transcriptionand Processing of a Eukaryotic +RNAGene.” Refreshments will be providedat 3:45 in CLSC room 151.* * *Masao S. Sasaki, Radiation BiologyCenter, Kyoto University, Kyoto,JapanMonday, 4-5 p.m.CLSC 101Following refreshments at 3:45, Sa¬saki will Speak on “Retinoblast-ma(RB); Cytogenetic Aspects of RBMutations and their relevance to theDevelopment of Cancer.”* * * 5811 S. KenwoodReed’s talk, “Productivity in Ameri¬can Local Government; How to Make ithappen,” is sponsored by the Workshopon Urban Politics.* * *Alderman Larry S. Bloom, U of CalumnusFriday, 8:30 p.m.Hillel, 5715 S. WoodlawnBloom will speak on “Between a rockand a hard place,” as part of the Fri¬day Hillel Forum.Venture internshipsJob Title: #411 Paralegal ClerkLocation: New York CitySalary: $250/35 hour week + time anda half for overtime.Starting Date: Jan '85 (there are open¬ings year round)Description:This is the largest lawfirm in NewYork City. Paralegal clerks are assis¬tants to paralegals. They mostly dosupport work like mailings and filing.Applicant must be available for a fullschool year (9-12 months). They wantsomeone who is highly motivated andan extremely hard worker.Job Title: #369 Intern — Office AideLocation: Washington, D.C.Salary: $250/weekStarting Date: Jan ’85Description:This office is a lobbying organiza¬tion; it monitors legislation and keepsabreast of grants and policy decisionsthat affect any of the nation’s urbancenters, especially New York. Intern’sduties include helping monitor legisla¬tive activity by attending congressio¬nal hearings, writing position papers,and communicating with federal of¬fices.Charles Reed, former Chief Adminis¬trative Office, Brookline, Mass, andLincoln, Neb.Tuesday, 4 p.m. Students should contact Joan T.McDonald, 962-7041, Career and Place¬ment Services for additional informa¬tion and applications.THEBOSTONCONSULTINGGROUPInvitesSeniors ToAn Informal Discussion"THE ASSOCIATESPROGRAM"November 28, 1984North LoungeReynolds Club12:00 PM ChicagoCity BaMARIA TALLCHIEF-Am\tu DmxfnPAUL MEJIA-Ani.rii Dimim LETNTSFALLREPERTOIRESERIESTWO WORLDPREMIERES'Wed., Nov. 2H-K:C0 P.M.*The SeasonsApolloValse FantasjeJeuxThurv, Nov. 29-8:00 P.M.*Thc SeasonsApolloYblse FantasjeJeuxFri., Nov. 30-7:00 P.M.'The SeasonsApollo‘Eight Bv Adler withSuzanne FarrellSat., Dec. 1-2:00 P.M.*The Seasons‘Eight Bv Adler withSuzanne FancI!Jme de VivreSat., Dec. 1-8:00 P.M.Apollo\&lse Fantasie*The *seasonsJeux *\VORiT> PREMIER!CALL THE AUDITORIUM 922-211 0.“2 FOR 1 STUDENT SPECIAL”ofCHICAGO CITY BALLET’SFALL REPERTOIREAT THEAUDITORIUM THEATREWED. SAT.NOV. 28th DEC. 1st8 p.m. 2 p.m.PRESENT VALID STUDENT I D. AT BOX OFFICE NO LATER THAN 1 HOUR BEFORE PERF.(REG. PRICES — *20, »1«, *12)rThe IMAROONEXPRESSEXAM WEEK WILL QUICKL Y BE UPON US...GET DOWNTOWNWHILE YOU STILL HAVE TIME LEFT TO PROCRASTINATE...... see the long-running, comedy, "who-done-rt” "Sheer Madness «t the BlackstoneTheatre—couple of blocks south of the Art Institue on Michigan—call 786-9120 tor ticketinformation• • • the Chicago Film Festival has gotten underway at the Carnegie Theatre Check out thedazzling array of foreign and experimental films—call 944-2966 tor a complete hatingWater Tower stop, then head over to Rush Street... ‘ The Family Game” and "Eureka" have both started at the Biograph Theatre—get off atGrant Hospital, head a couple of blocks north on Lincoln Pick up some discount PtittTheatre tickets at Reynolds Dub Box OfficeTickets 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.Tto final ran of the MAROON EXPRESS for Winter Quarter it SaL, Mai. 3.Schedule for Maroon ExpressNorthbound SouthboundUiNspa fc»pa UlpalfcMpa • Dwaracy k Oak 745 pa 945 pa 1145 pa 145 aafrTtlllllMf Ml pa Ml pa lMIpa . Graa Hapiaf - NtfMgfa MlaaAit kadtok feU pa 1:56 pa . (VMkaw 1 Ltacofa)•wsurTowwPtoc 7:11 pa 9:11 pa . Waw Tower Ftoc* - 12:15 aa MS aa#GntfHapiai(WtbsNv A Ltocah) 7-Jlpa 9*pa . (IMepai• 1041 pa miaa 2JI aabDtwnry h ClarkA 745 pa 945 pa 11:15 pa 145 aa StoaMtil Napa Ul paliJI pav ' VThe Chicago Maroon- Friday, November 16, 1984—7THE ORGANIZATIONOF BLACK STUDENTSPresents theEnd of the RafflePARTY!TONIGHT AT 9 PMInternational House1414 E. 59th StreetDrawing will be held at 11 pmMusic by “Mix”Free admission I At BudgetS'_ _ _ _ _ ... _ erene.%10 offNOW 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 1II1 Ask about our greatunlimited mileageweekend rates! IIA Budget System Licensee BudgetSears Renta Car rent a carUse your Sears credit card at authorizeddistribution centers in most Budget offices Check local office for rental re¬quirementsOffer good through 11 /30/84VISITING FELLOWS COMMITTEErequests suggestions forFUTURE VISITING FELLOWSPrevious participants have been:John Paul StevensJ. William FulbrightAdlai E. Stevenson IIIJoseph A. Califano, Jr.Michael S. DukakisColeman YoungHans A. BetheMeg GreenfieldDixy Lee RayLeonard Woodcock Frank PressKingman Brewster, Jr.Walter WristonMary McCarthyCharlton HestonElizabeth HoltzmanWilliam F. Buckley, Jr.David C. JonesJohn Kenneth GalbraithMarvin GoldbergerRosalyn S. YaloFuture Visiting Fellows will include:Arthur LafferBeverly SillsPlease give your nominations to any member ofthe Visiting Fellows Committee:Robert M. Wald, Chairman (2-7765)Shelia A. Dugan (493-8102)Jan E. Goldstein (2-8388)Tasso Kaper (947-0747)Sondra Krueger (493-6759)R. Eric Lombard (2-8091)Francolse Meltzer (2-8474Reginald J. Mills (7Charles E. Cohen, ex officio (7!officioF.Gregory Campbell, ex (2-8—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 19841November 2, 1984 • 17th YearU.K. REGGAEBRINGING THE WAR HOMESteel Pulse Earth Crisis (Elektra 60315-1)UB 40 Gallery Morgan (A & M SP5033)Linton Kwesi Johnson Making History (Is¬land ILPS 9770)“Play I on the R and B; want my peo¬ple to see.We're bubbling on the Top 100,Just like a might dread.”Bob Marley, “Roots, Rock, Reggae”by Pablo ConradWith new albums this year from SteelPulse, UB 40, and Linton Kwesi Johnson,it’s time to inaugurate a valid new sub¬genre: U.K. Reggae. And forget about thestrictures handed down in these pages bythe vaunted arbiters of pop-critical usage.Whether it’s the product of a steamingWest Kingston shanty-town or a post-in¬dustrial slum in the north of England, reg¬gae is the sound of a sub-culture Be*” inmind that politics (“content”) and d icemusic have always married happily on heairwaves of modern African and Carit je¬an states. At its angry best, reggaethrows riot-act lyrics up against an unre¬lenting drum and bass backdrop. Not ex¬actly what’s “bubbling on the Top 100”here in the States.So why does most of the interesting stuffseem to be coming out of England? Jamai¬cans still produce the heaviest dancetracks and monster M.C.s (e.g. Yellowman,Eek-A-Mouse, Sister Carol, Jim Brown) butwhat’s really getting Stateside distribu¬tion and the attendant airplay on progres¬sive radio stations just doesn’t fit the Ja¬maican mold. A look at the directionstaken by the U.K. artists and a listen tothe new material tells why.Steel Pulse, UB 40, and Linton KwesiJohnson all debuted around five years agoby grabbing reggae’s delicate mix ofmusic and moral imperative and chargingright down the street, no doubt fueled bythe exaggerated intensity of the (already)post-1970’s Brit music scene. U.K. reggaesurvived and flourished by exceeding itsJamacian sources. Lyrics dealt with thecommonplace violence of racist society oneither side of the Atlantic. The Babylon ofRasta imagery came into focus as Ku KluxKlan, National Front, and political betray¬al, while elaborate arrangements and en¬gineering pushed the musical vehicle to anew blatancy. Early records like Hands-worth Revolution by Steel Pulse, and Lin¬ton Kwesi Johnson’s Forces of Victoryseemed to have rewired all that was bestin the great studio teams of Kingston JA,at a time when the Jamaican sound wasbeing stripped down to essentials, in an ef¬fort to accommodate a deluge of micro¬phone stars and novelty rappers.Handworth Revolution reached for an al¬most orchestral grandeur, always stea¬died by a crackling rhythm attack. Overthe whole, lead singer and writer DavidHinds intoned, "I’ve see the bodies in theirmutilated condition, faces scarred beyondrecognition / If this is what civilizationmeans to me, then without it I prefer be”(sic). By 1980, Steel Pulse had followed upwith the conceptual Tribute To The Mar¬tyrs, a history lesson built around horn-powered anthems to George Jackson, Ste¬ven Biko and, on the title track, aneventual roll call of black “freedomfighters” from the Caribbean slave- rebellions through Malcolm X, Dr. M.L.King, and the Black Panthers.From the West Indian community of in¬dustrial Birmingham, England, Steel Pulsewas the most Jamaican-identified of theU.K. scene being aired over here. On sub¬sequent releases a gradual decline inHinds’ songwriting and arranging was ac¬companied by a move toward less-politicaland more palatable topics: dance, love,and Rasta transcendence. Instead of mak¬ing remarkable albums, Hinds and com¬pany began turning in remarkable songs,perhaps one or two on each LP.This year’s Earth Crisis is no exception.Despite the big-budget remixing and mas¬tering done in New York and Los Angelescourtesy of Elektra Records, Steel Pulselifts its head only in occasional moments, agood chorus or bridge, perhaps, but neversustained for a whole song. The problem isin Hinds’ writing. His attempt to compre¬hend the post-Helen Caldicott weltschmerzin the title track and on “Wild GooseChase” smply underscores the fact thatprevious and better Rasta eschatologistssucceeded by borrowing wholesale out ofIsaiah and Revelations.But when UB 40 tries to take on theNATO missiles in their backyard, the reg¬gae idiom is shorn of its spirituality alto¬gether. These are white boys, after all,only bassist Earl Falconer and trumpeter-cum-M.C. “Astro” are dreadlocked Jamai¬cans. But wait! Don’t hang up. Assisted byEarl’s brother, producer-cum-engineer Ray“Pablo” Falconer, this crew recorded asuccession of dazzling 12 inch singles thatremain among the best reggae Englandhas to offer. The sound and vision here isunswervingly English: a “UB 40” is aclaims form for the unemployment benefitsmade popular by the Thatcher team’s eco¬nomic policies. Over a dense, dark rhythmfrom the first LP, Ali Campbell’s nasaltenor announced “There are murders thatwe must account for / bloody deeds havebeen done in my name / criminal acts wemust pay for / and our children willshoulder the blame / I’m a British subjectnot proud of it / while I carry the burden ofshame.” Was the U.S. market ready?‘ Better, and less somber, were the ex¬tended re-mixes of songs like “I Won’tClose My Eyes,” and “Love Is All Is AllRight!” By 1982 A & M records was readyto collect several of these for a U.S. re¬lease, and followed up with the hit “Red,Red Wine” from Labour of Love, a compila¬tion of the UB’s techno-pop remakes of oldJamaican singles. Of course the first U.S.single wasn’t going to take up the questionof the NATO missiles (“Forget The Cost,we’ve got to choose, cause we’re runningin a race we can only lose.”) but there wassome justice in the white boys succeedingon the strengths of their Jamaicansources.With the new Geffery Morgan, UB 40seems to have survived the transition tothe mainstream (i.e., progressive and Con¬temporary Hit Radio) such as it is. Thisnewest effort is just a job, a happy combi¬nation of the earlier brick-and-bottle-toss-ing authenticity with more recently-ac¬quired polish. Pan-African polyrhythmsare doubled back on expensive soundingclap-tracks and microchip percussion. Andborrowing authority from such an expert¬ly-balanced melange, even the overly ar¬ ticulate political analyses seem somehowto work. Recorded in Birmingham and mas¬tered in Hollywood, says the sleeve, andthat’s exactly what you hear.Sounds too easy, doesn’t it? Tone downthe agit-prop with Stateside productionvalues and U.K. reggae goes internation¬al. Well, maybe. But just when you thoughtif was safe to go back onto the dance floor(NATO missiles, indeed!) Linton KwesiJohnson releases Making History. Andwith this stuff we cease all the glib postur¬ing and simply listen, awestruck.Linton Kwesi Johnson (LKJ hereafter)turns the sub-genre upside down andwalks rudely over our smug equations ofpolitical pop. “I don’t want people to mis¬take what I’m doing for reggae music,” hetold a West Coast interviewer in 1980.“You could describe my poetry as reggaepoetry, in so far as it’s coming out of thattradition, but I am not a reggae act in thesense of Steel Pulse or any of these othergroups.” Well, all right if you say so, butthat sure sounds like the slash and burn ofhigh watts roots music on those records. Infact, LKJ’s “songs” are poems; we’re deal¬ing with the spoken word here, and thetopicality comes right off the front pages.Forces of Victory (1979) and Bass Culture(1980) delivered listeners into the bleakworld of the Brixton and New Cross neigh¬borhoods in South London, where Blackand Asian youth were going fist-to-fistagainst the white-supremacist NationalFront and a hostile police force. There areno ganja paeans on these albums. NoRasta. But the musical backing is a thun¬derous jazz-inflected reggae, and militantas hell.So why, from 1980 until this year’s Mak¬ing History, was there no new product?History was in the making. This is a recordfrom the Black community in Britain thatburst into flame in 1981, beginning inBrixton and spreading through Birmingh¬am, Liverpool, Manchester and Leeds, andbeyond.LKJ the poet, editor (Race Today), acti¬vist and community organizer had littlechance to pursue a recording career. Andwhen the topic of nuclear war comes up onthe LP’s opening track, you quickly learnwhere this poet stands; not with UB 40 orSteel Pulse: “Di eagle and di bear havepeople living in fear / of impending nuclearwarfare. / But as a matter of fact, believeit or not, plenty people don’t care if it im¬minent or not / if the first world attack or ifthe human race survive or not / for some isaware that life is already ‘coming like anightmare.”Obviously, this kind of thing suggestsother concerns than commercial success.And ultimately, in a sub-genre as fraughtwith contradictions as U.K. reggae. LKJ’swork is the most interesting, if not themost appealing. And this position typifiesthe music as a whole: more lyrically andmusically blatant than the Jamaican foun¬tainhead, it better suits the appetites ofthe Yankee audience. So stop scanning theimport bins exclusively. In 1984. the frontlines come to you. Steel Pulse, Earth CrisisUB 40, Geffery MorganLinton Kwesi Johnson. Making HistoryHere on the South Side, reggae music of alldescriptions can be heard on WHPK 89.5FM on Saturday afternoons from noon tosix. Positive Vibrations D.J.s Bill Finleyand Bobby D feature Steel Pulse as a pe¬rennial favorite, as well as up-to-date re¬leases from the Kingston scene, and occa¬sional iocal Chicago talent. The sets areconsistently long and varied. Six very en¬joyable hours of radio each week. —PCAli and Robin of UB 40GALAHOSTS ADANCESATURDAY NOV. 17INTERNATIONAL HOUSEEAST LOUNGE9 PM$2 w/U °f C ID$3 OTHERS$ ARNALDO HIOMKUANOSETTIMO CONTRIBUTE! ALLA STORIADEGLISTUDICLASSICIE DEL MONDO AN1X0JANET COX-REARICKDYNASTY AND DESTINY IN MEDIO ARTSEMINARY COUP R00KST0RE5757 S. UNIVERSITY 7524381MON-FRI 8:30-610 SAT1600-500 SUNIZOO-SOOBlackfriars presentsThe Threepenny Operaby Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill[directed by Scott Johnsonand Evan OwensNOV 23^4 NOV 28,29,30 DEC 1Reynolds Club 1st floor theater8:00 pmTickets $4.00/$3.00 with UCIDTAT SAMMY''HyzrCHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANTSpecializing in Cantoneseand American dishesOpen Daily l l A -8:30 P.M.Closed Monday1318 E. 63rd MU 4-1062Jonathan Z. Smithwill speak atCalvert House(Catholic Student Center)onCatholics and the Old TestamentFriday, Nov 16th 5:30 P.M.Pizza dinner will be served at no charge All are welcome5735S. UniversityAve. 288-2311 MANDATORYMaroon Staff Meeting1 st Floor of Ida Noyes - Cloister ClubWELCOME TO CHEE KING10% 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 Place842-7777 FOOD Sunday JNovember 18that7 p.m. FOODWe will elect an editor2—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALMISCMen in Feminism Feminism is not anew topic, but people continue tomisunderstand It. In the past ithas been primarily the concern ofwomen, though it is of impor¬tance to everyone. It should bethought about and discussed bywomen and men. With this inmind, the Women’s Union hasasked Lauren Berlant and WayneBooth to talk about their viewsof men’s role in feminism.We hope this presentation will bemore than theoretical. We hope itwill provoke thought, raise oldand new issues and questions,and provide a starting point fordiscussion among students oncampus.The talk will take place on Tues¬day evening November 20 at7:30 p.m. in Harper 130. Therewill be a reception afterwards togive you a chance to talk aboutwhat you heard Women's UnionMUSICRickie Lee Jones Her music is firmlyrooted in the Stax/Volt and NewYork R&B sound of the late fifties,but she gussies everything up with asinger/songwriter’s taste for per¬sonal, complex arrangements. Un¬like someone such as Joni Mitcheifwho balances her compositions well,however, Rickie Lee Jones’ muchmore straight-forward melodies getbogged down in the overly compli¬cated song structures. Bruce Spring¬steen faced the very same formalproblem of stylistic integration inhis early albums, but he solved thedifficulty by always stressing themelodic flow above everything else,something that Jones either refusesor doesn’t know how to do.however, she might well wortsongs' intricacies to her benefit.Who knows? 8 and 11 p.m. tonightat the Bismarck Theater. 666-6667.-FSArt Blakey and his Jazz Messengers Oneof the most important post-war jazzdrummers, Art Blakey’s hard bopstyle pushed the innovations ofCharly Parker one frenetic step fur¬ther down the road. But that’s just adescription of history. To know themustc you should go see one of thismaster’s final sets from his week-long gig. Tonight thru Sun Nov 18 atJoe Segal’s Jazz Showcase tn theBlackstone Hotel. 427-4300. —FSChaka Kahn “Ain’t Nobody” off herpenultimate album was a crossovertriumph; H packed more emotion inits chorus than almost all the othertop forty hits of last year put to¬gether. The singing made the songbelievable, and that hasn't hap¬pened too regularly in the radiofare of the past eight or nine years.As for her new album, a quote fromVince Aletti, an old pro of a soul crit¬ic: “She turns every (Arif) Mardinvariation Into, a Chaka Khannumber, slipping and sliding up anddown a dramatic scale but keepingit cool, very cool. You get the feelingshe is pushing her vocal limit butholding back emotionally — alwayssomething in chilly reserve — andthe tension can be thrilling.** As apretty down beat addendumthough, it must be added that Aiettinotes that her coolness translatesall too literally on stage. He says ofher recent Radio City show, “Sheworked it — she sang those songs —but she let too much slide.” Sat Nov17 at 8 at the Bismarck Theater.666-6667. — FSLou Reed At this writing, tickets arestill available for this rock 'n' roll le¬gend. If you can get out to see him atthis distant (but nice) theater, do so(if you can’t, go see Sonny Okosun).If you’re a doubter, his concertshave been reputed to have transfor¬mative powers, and regardless ofhow you feel about his music, hfs im¬portance in shaping the punk/new-wave movement is undeniable. Also,he’s touring with what’s probablythe best band he’s had since the Vel¬vet Underground. What the hell, I’lleven give you a ride. Sat Npv 17 atthe Holiday Star Theater, Merrill¬ville, Indiana. Tickets around$15.00. 234-7286. —FSMcCoy Tyner Trio He’s made dozens ofrecords in a solo career thatstretches back to the mid sixties,and all that I’ve heard have fea¬tured his piano in continually variedand imaginative settings, buildingupon innovations in Improvisationaland conceptual jazz with a sureness and steadiness that’s quite remark¬able. For his work in John Cottrane’ssuperb 1962-1965 quartet alone hewould have earned a place in jazzhistory. But in the fast twenty yearshe's proved that he's earned hisspot in that history as an arrangerand composer in his own right too.Tues Nov 20 thru Sun Nov 25 at JoeSegal’s Jazz Showcase at the Black-stone Hotel. 427-4300. -FSChicago Symphony Orchestra LeonardSlatkin conducts a program ofBeethoven, Hindemith, and Proko¬fiev, with Mark Peskanov on violin.Fri Nov 16 at 2, and at Nov 17 at 8.Orchestra Hall. 435-8111.His Majestie’s Clerkes This sixteenvoice chamber ensemble will give aprogram entitled “Iberia’s GoldenAge, Music from 18th CenturySpain, Colonial Mexico, and Peru.”Fri Nov 16 at 12:15, G.A.R. rotunda,Chicago Public Library CulturalCenter, 78 E. Washington.340-3278.Ravi Shankar Mr. Shankar wrote themusic for the movie Gandhi, and hasskillfully translated much Indianmusic to Western orchestration. Heis internationally recognized for hisefforts to popularize both tradition¬al Indian and Western music forms.He will perform on sitar, with AllaRekha on tabla. Fri Nov 16 at 8, andSat Nov 17 at 2. Field Museum ofNatural Hfstory. 9229410American Conservatory of MusicChamber Symphony Maurice Morganconducts works of Dvorak, Mozart,and Gounod. Sun Nov 18 St. Paul’sEvangelical Lutheran Church, 1301 NLa Salle. 263-4161.Music of the Baroque David Schraderwill offer a concert of 16th and 17thcentury Spanish keyboard music.For some unjustifiable reason, Span¬ish Baroque music has never had asmuch popular appeal as German andItalian Baroque, though the musicand its tradition are just as rich, asthis program will surely demon¬strate. Tue Nov 20 at 5:30. G.A.R.rotunda, the Chicago Public LibraryCultural Center. 346-3278.The Collegium Musicum and the Univer¬sity Motet Choir combine forces thisweekend to present a concert ofSpanish Baroque Music. Under thedirection of Mary Springfels and Bruce Tanmen the two ensembleswill perform music by Vittoria,Guerrero, Fafconiero, Hidalgo andothers. The performance is Sat Nov17 at 8 in Goodspeed Recital Halt.Admission is free.Jean Dubuflet: Forty Years of His Art:’creativity' — Dubuffet’s dangerousprivileging of the unconscious as thekey to creativity. Madness lightensthe man and gives him wings andhelps to have vision. A rhetoricwhich divides the world into Irregu¬lars and homologizers and equatesmadness with genius. To which Du¬buffet counters: the insane are nomore insane than the sane.” (GCJ,10/19) At the Smart Gallery, 5550 S.Greenwood. Tue-Sat, 10-4, Sun 12-4.Free.The Hill Series: An American LandscapePaintings by James M. Anderson,Guy T. Fisher and Douglas Van Dykerecord an abandoned industrial siteir Blue Island, Illinois. At the HydePark Art Center, 1701 E. 53rd at324-5520.Sex-Specific: Photographic Investiga¬tions of Contemporary Sexuality bysome of the most provocative pho¬tographers to make such an investi¬gation: Harry Bowers, Sarah Char-lesworth, Barbara Ciurej, LindsayLochman, Robert Mapplethorpe,Jane Regan and Cindy Sherman. Atthe School of t ie Art Institute Supe¬rior Stret Gallery, 341 W. Superior,443-3703.Horst Janssen: Drawings and Etchings:173 works on loan from Europeancollections, including prints, draw¬ings, pastels, and etchings. OpensSaturday at the Art Institute, Michi¬gan at Adams. 443-3625.The Ronco Show: The popular cultureof creative acts/ The creative acts ofpopular culture/ The popular actsculture creates. Pre-fab installationsart-event, at the Randolph StreetGallery, 756 N. Milwaukee. OpeningSaturday, 6-9 p.m.Art For Young Collectors The Renias-sance Society’s annual sale opensSunday. Fourth Floor Cobb; Tues-Sat. 10-4, Sun 12-4. bridge school. Northlight RepertoryTheatre, 2300 Green Bay Rd, Evan¬ston. 869-7278. Tues-Fri at 8; Sat at5; 8:45; Sun at 3, 7:30. $13-17. ThruDec 16. Student discount.The King and I Yui Brynner is back,bald head, crossed arms, and all, inthe role that he made famous. ArteCrown Theatre, 2300 S. Lake Shore,791-6000. Tues-Sun at 8, $10-$22.50. Wed and Sat matinees at 2,$8-$18.50. Thru Dec. 2.Marty Pie Magnets’ adaptation of thePaddy Chayevsky screen;p!ay willplay tonight and Saturday at 8 inthe Reynold’s Club Third FloorTheatre. $3.DANCEJansdances presents the Chicago pre¬miere of “The Dancing Wu Li Mas¬ters,” is based on Gary Zukav'sbook of the same name and is in¬spired by the new physics, childhoodgames, and Erkert’s interest in thefusion of dance and gymnastics.Original music by Chicago composerClaudia Howard. Nov 23, 24, 30 andDec 1 at 8. Columbia College DanceCenter, 4730 N Sheridan. $8; $6 stu¬dents. 271-7804.RLMHigh Plains Drifter (Clint Eastwood,1973) Clint Eastwood puts IndianaJones to shame in this whip-flingin’dynamite totin' ghost story about agunslinger who returns from thesand to avenge his soul. Eastwood(the man Life Magazine once de¬scribed as a graduate of the MountRushmore School of Acting) really hithis stride and pacing as a director,alternating savagely between sat¬ire and outright glorification of theexaggerated conventions of epicWesterns. The hero in Drifter is notjust a myth—he (like Ethan Edwards,Shane, or Kane) is a mirage; hedoesn’t just ride off into the sunset,he evaporates at the film’s end. Formy money, this is still Eastwood'sbest—the true “Prince” of spaghettiwesterns. Fri Nov 16 7:30 & 10 LSF—PTFGrey City Journal 16 November 84Staff: Stephanie Bacon, Suzanne Buchanan, Pablo Conrad, SusanGreenberg, Irwin Keller, Michael Kotze, Nadine McGann, David Miller,Patrick Moxey, Brian Mulligan, Susan Pawloski, John Probes, Max Renn,Rachel Saltz, Wayne Scott, Frankiin Soults, Mark Toma, Ken Wissoker, RickWojcikProduction: Stephanie Bacon, Susan Greenberg, Bruck KingAssociate Editors: Stephanie Bacon, Brian MulliganEditor: Bruce King THEATRETab For Stardom Opens tonight at theVictory Gardens Theatre, 2257 NLincoln, 871-3000. Tues-Fri at 8; Satat 6, 9:30; Sun at 3. $9-$20. $2 stu¬dent discount with I.D.Quarter mains'a Term* Simon Gray’sstory of seven assorted geeke whoearn their daily scones bv teachingEnglish to foreigners at a small Cam¬ Rope (Alfred Hitchcock, 1948) Accord¬ing to the director, “l undertookRope as a stunt, that’s the only way 1can describe It.” A daring stunt in¬deed. Hitchcock had juat escapedSeiznlck and formed his own prod¬uction company. As a manifesto ofartistic freedom, he flifned PatrickHamilton’s play entirely ini ten-min¬ute takes, without cuts, in which thecamera moves continuously througheach comDlete scene It wa«sary to devise complicated tracking shots and rotating sets to acgonto-date scene changes. Hitchcock hadalways tried to “cut inside” the cam¬era, but this was the most extremetest of photographic prophecy. Thestory was inspired by the real-lifeescapades of certain twisted HydePark denizens: two young intellectu¬als (Farfey Granger and John Dali)strangle a buddy to prove Nietzscheis peachy. Rope is Hitchcock's firstcolor film, and the first to starJimmy Stewart (as an ali-too-per-suasive professor). After Notorious,this is probably the Master’s bestrendition of film noir. Sat Nov 17 at7:30 and 9:45, LSF. — Steven J.McConnellMoscow on the Hudson (Paul Ma-zursky, 1984) Bloomingdaie’s as cul¬tural metaphor? Fri Nov 16 at 7 and9:45. DOC. $2.50.Tender Mercies (Bruce Beresford,1984) It’s quality night at DOC. Hoho. Sat Nov 17 at 7 & 9; Sun Nov 18at 2:30. DOC. $2.50.Vidas Secas (N. Pereira Dos Santos,1963) depicts the struggle of a pea¬sant family to survive in barrenNorthwest Brazil. One of the bestfilms to come out of the cinema novomovement from Latin America. SunNov 18 at 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Interna¬tional House $2. — Bob TravisFrom Hitler to the MX (Joan Harvey,1983) A serious, hard-hitting docu¬mentary, From Hitler to the MX is astriking statement about the aims ofU.S. nuclear arms policy. Blunt andunabashedly biased, this film ham¬mers home the belief that big busi¬ness has as much at stake in the evilsof the atom as in the evils of Hitler.Sun Nov 18 at 8. OOC $2.A Nous La Liberte (Rene Clair, 1931) Apopular film, well-made and oftencopied — Charlie Chaplin fashionedhis Modem Times on this fifm. Ciairdemonstrates that sound comedycan be as fluid as silent comedy. Aclassic. Mon Nov 19 at 7:30 & 9:30p.m. International House. $2. — BobTravisReport From the Front (Tom Yates andPam Seigal, 1983) This is a thirtyminute film about the CIA's covertwar against Nicaragua which, sincethe election. Reagan has decided toescaiate into a “tough new policy ofdeliberate intimidation and harass¬ment,” (Tribune, Nov. 13). The filmincludes interviews with contras inHonduran camps, as well as withWashington critics and Nicaraguanforeign minister Miguei D’Escoto.The effects of the attacks on the Ni¬caraguan population is a centraltheme of the film. Skylight Films,producer of this film, also madeWhen the Mountains Tremble, aboutoppression and revolution in Guate¬mala. The New York Times called Re¬port From The Front a “short, tough,harrowing film.” Discussion wifi fol¬low. Mon, Nov 19 at 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes East Lounge Sponsored byCAUSENight And The City (Jules Dassin, 1950)Professional wrestling in London isthe backdrop for this story of be¬trayal and mediocrity. Richard Wid-mark is Harry Fabian, a small timethug who tries to wheel and deal hisway into the syndicate-controlledwrestling circuit. When the snydicatechief (Herbert Lorn) discovers hisplan, however. Fabian finds himselfbeing pursued by the vicious mobhenchman, “the Strangler.” NightAnd The City is the beautifully pho¬tographed view of one man's discov¬ery that he is and always will be aloser. Mon Nov 19 at 7:30. DOC $2.We Live Again (Robert Mamoulian,1934) A lavish production of the Tol¬stoy work Resurrection, We LiveAgain differs from most of cinemato¬grapher Toland's films in that it is astar vehicle. Samuel Goldwyn triedto promote Russian actress AnnaStern to stardom in three specif¬ically designed films, all photo¬graphed by Totand; Nava, The Wed¬ding March, and tonight’s film.Director Mamoutian, an importantvisual stylist himself, pushed the cin¬ematographer to exquisite limits inthis one. With Frederick March. TueNov 20 at 8. DOC. $2.Repo Man (Alex Cox, 1084) Much bet¬ter than you might expect. MichaelNesmith, ex of the Monkees, pro¬duced this very interesting sort ofsci fi, punkish cross sectional view ofAmerica. (Where did Mr. Monkeeget the money to go around produc¬ing films'7 His mother invented Liq¬uid Paper and made millions.) EmilioEstevez (Martin Sheen's kid) andHarry Dean Stanton star as therookie and veteran repossessionmen. The framing and continuity ofimages is carefully, if not subtletyconstructed. Not really a must see,but certainly an entertaining filmOf course one must see this ftim to re¬ally understand the more recentlyreleased Buckaroo Banzai. Fine ArtsTheatre. — JHChoose Me (Alan Randolph, 1984) Avery funny love octagon. The filmcenters on the amazingly Intricaterelationships which spring up in thespace of a few days among a groupof amazingly neurotic CaliforniansRudolph shows a great deal of fond¬ness for the quirkness of his charac¬ters — we iaugh with them, not atthem. Genevieve Bujoid, Keith Car-radine and Lesley Ann Warren starm th» FUNNtGftT movie in town fin*Arts Theatre — JHRickie Lee Jones THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1984—3Sonny Okosun will be performing on campusSaturday night with his 14 piece Ozzidi bandwhich includes female back up singers anddancers. Okosun has had nothing but goodpress since he’s started playing here in theStates. His first American release, Liberationrecently received four stars from RollingStone and his concerts have consistently soldout in New York (playing Harlem’s AppolloTheatre), Washington and Austin (yippee!). Anative of Nigeria, Okosun has been a majorforce in “world music,” an attempt to blendany number of musical styles into a coherentsynthesis of universal pop. In the past he hasweaved together a high energy mix of highlife (using chanted choruses), American funk(the use of both bass and synthesizer), Latinsalsa, Afro-beat and most importantly, Ja¬maican reggae. At his last show in New York,one observer pointed out the new traces ofblack gospel. Okosun is a consistent innova¬tor but one who is also trying to prove apoint. There is an inherent attempt to createa sens'1 of unity through pop music. Don’t takethis to mean the emphasis of the evening willbe didactically political — with Sonny Oko¬sun, you come to dance. If you walk awayfeeling a little closer to our black and whitepeers, Okosun is suce eding; if you walkaway just having had a good time, he is stillsucceeding. Okosun’s ^»:sic is designed tocreate good feeling, not the empty good feel¬ing of Reagan’s TV commercials — the adora¬tion of a perfect past ttut never was, ratherOkoson’s is the natural good feeling whichcomes from having hope for the future. Oko¬sun sings many of his songs in English whileothers combine English with Yoruba. Songs tokeep an ear open for are “Amen”, “Libera¬tion,” and “Tell Them (That Freedom is theAnswer),” a tribute to those who have diedfor freedom (from Kwame Nkrumah to MartinLuther King Jr.). In general, Okosun’s music isan uplifting experience for both mind andbody. Anyone who claims to be interested inpop music and doesn’t show up for Okosunand his band is only fooling him or herself.Mandel Hall at 8 PM Saturday November17.—BMSonny OkosunChamber -Ftetoricfe Frmz 8ibar. Mo! a name oneveryone's Hpe these <fays. Sot Baroque cog¬noscenti and the cortoys alike might Wndthemselves smiling with satisfaction tm Sun¬day* November 1ft at 6:00 p.m, when the Uni./ersity Chamber Orchestra wilt performSiberia Baftaii# Sonata aa part of their fallconcert m Goods peed Half, Qt course, my en>thtt$iaem i* understandable rye warned toconduct this piece for a long time. So now I’velet you in on it. I conduct the UCO. Our pro¬gram wifi Include me Vtatffel ConcertoFor Two Trumpets, with eoteiJohn Htafofeand Merman to*>-g«toder*erg ConcertoHo, 6fey Bash, end ft* Bfvertsmdflto Mo. 1$,K. W, for fm home pod strings by Mozart.Oor continue* to be on atyfifeh per- because of Its ternWarffjr and acknowledged'greatness with lesser known Instrumentsurprises. The Battuta Sonets, scored , totthree violin parts, too# vtof* parte gwowhich wifi be performed on violas de gamfeal,and continue, Is a musical narrative of. toftl*fory skirmish, before, during, and Offer, witha pefytonal movement suggesting Charlesiv»$, and a aofo yfofto cadenza that, immedi¬ately brings to mind sections of Stravinsky'siUgMewe du Soldat ft’s hard to imagine thatStravinsky didn't Know foi$ piece* but if he.W, It gaee to prove tM eveii musical Ms*fory repeats fceeft- The Vivafol concerto, fea-HUrja end or|^,c4p|su0, isCfcafeetedstlcaftir bright, viffoeistfor and com¬pletely deBghtfoi land, I might a&r, brilliant¬ly played by Mr, Kodak end Mr, Birge) Whocan say no to the sixth Bfangonburg Coneerto,wish tf&£- dettefoue Sonority of violas arid'garrfoas? Add the Mojart fo -Aseries of witty and touching musical w-grottos, We‘d tike to sham oar inusieyou, ftfope this preview wilt bring you out forfree foiiM wine^l-cheese at our recaption following mo concert.H -gtetfid Sped Bab**. iH , ii ifUM^International Glam RagElle International, Fall-Winter 84.It was a black day in Hyde Park when Bob’snewsstand stopped carrying foreign fashionmagazines. Where previously there had beenmyriad exotic possibilities: British Vogue,French Vogue and Elle, Italian L’uomi, and thecentral jewel in Bob’s crown, AustralianVogue, now nothing but wimpy AmericanVogue, and Glamour, which seems to havechosen the deplorable Cosmo (-politan, notCampoli) as its new role model — talk about afall from grace.A salve for my wounds finally appeared onthe shelves of (oddly enough) the Hyde ParkCo-op, in the form of a totally new style rag,Elle International. Now being published in 9countries, the magazine retains the “Europe¬an flavor” of the French Elle, its parent maga¬zine; that is to say, the photography is superi¬or, more clothes are featured, a sense ofhumor is apparent. Yellow lipstick, an inter¬view with Princess Stephanie, knitting pat¬terns, etc. grace the endless pages of glampeople in glam clothes doing glam things inthe Fall-Winter issue. The sole disappointmentwith Elle International is that the articles arein English — you can read them now, andthey’re pretty mindless. Biannual this year,the magazine goes monthly next year, andit’s even cheaper than American Vogue. —SBMuddy Waters§ (Tb« BootcfOe Coocbfft Man) A musteaf Meg-rapfty of tb© tengendary Muesmatt fey JimmyTillman and Jackie Taylor of trie Black £n»e-mfefo* The musical $&rt of ibis “mustcaf trib¬ute*’ is really first rate, with mustefaric UOvteLae* formerly fernief leader of trie MuddyWaters Bfues 8enriT Baiwenfoa Htoea, RoteCosey, formerly -with the Miles Daria Band*and Jimmy Tittojan* currently staying wkftWitlte Dixon and the Chicago Blubs Aft Gtete,serving up such classics as ”Hoocftha GooebieMaa*% *‘4Q Days and 40 Htgfete’4 and "MoJoWorking” with a style and energy that Is ex¬perienced only by habitues qfTftpresris andthe Checkerboard cm a good night beadsinger/actor Boy Hytowet plays die tftfe rolelike a cross tjetwedrllSB^lfiBggdr and JimmyWalker, hemming, ft gp Hk# mad, but alwaysbeiteveaPie. DrffoRanatefy, toe .foay string¬ing musical sequences together dfeed notmatch foe highly professional oueffty of themusic, important momenta gf Wafers* tile. Watersare never mentioned. white others, such a*ero mafe*s response to the rumors, whfob latofturned fidp® be tolse* fgiq.i}teter# jg#s tolledin a ear crash, are gratuitous, sentimental,and superfluous. Also* some of toe narratee,.detfvored for '-HeavatHtnows^et T«seoo byfee 4<bftsd tW”l5haries iMfefetebMoore) la Inrhymed ooopteffe are emtjairasslngfy lft»those that ere heard m hlgh-schod prfid^t^tlons. White people are depicted as dre op¬pressor, frehr the pries who oomnJBed #teordinal oppreaeloh by kidhappihg thousandsOf Africans into slavery, to the unscrupulooarecord company executives who tried fo takeadvantage of the early black recording ar¬tists’ mririte end cheat them out of tons ofthousands of dollars worth of royalties, Onething is clear from aft this; the blues is a un¬iquely black form Of music, which, v/tdi all re-.Spect to $uch white artiste as Erie Clapton andStevte Ray Vaughn,, could only have arisenhorn the black experience, Jane AddamsCenter, 3212 & Broadway* 545-1631, Frl,Bat, 7;3B and IS. Slgte — SPJohn Cale, Live at the Cabaret Metro“This is a song that was written a long timeago,” intoned John Cale during the middle ofhis set, “And this is how it was supposed tosound,” and with that, he slammed into “I’mWaiting for My Man”, playing an even morediscordant version of the tune than appearedon the first Velvet Underground album al¬most twenty years ago. In the middle of thesong, Cale let loose a strange diatribe on Au-gosto Pinochet, anglicizing his name to Au¬gustus and then talking to him as if he werehis Roman namesake and Cale were the pro¬tagonist in Robert Graves’ / Claudius. The gistof it was that Augusto would fall to poison,just like Graves fated his Augustus, and Cale,as Claudius, would feed it to him. A great andfunny boast, but what the hell was it doing ina song about a junkie? Maybe I shouldn’t ask,but I still don’t get it.There was alot I didn’t get at the moderate¬ly short set Cale played last Sunday night atthe Cabaret Metro. In fact, the biggest thing Ilearned about Cale that night was that I real¬ly don’t understand where he’s coming from.About half the tunes were very tightly struc¬tured, very evocative and really appealingto the ear — they ranged from the candyhooks of “Paris 1919” to the driving, rousingcatchiness of “Dead or Alive” (my favoriteline: “Leave me out of it. I’m not proud.”). Theother half droned, or were discordant, orwere simply a random collection of notes, likethe guitar accompaniment to the traditionaltune “Streets of Loredo”. Cale is obviously in¬terested in the effects of song structure in it¬self, devoid of any specific subject referent(i.e. lyrical content). His catharsis is pure cath¬arsis, and his geopolitical tunes are moreironic descriptions than praxis or even justdogma. To him, all the song styles he uses areequally valid, but that makes me wonder ifthey’re all equally meaningless. Taken se¬parately, his songs construct their own termi¬nology, but taken together — or jumbled intogether like in his Pinochet speech or the lit¬tle bit of a Doors song he threw into “PabloPicasso” — the forms seem to negate eachother, leaving you (i.e. me) wondering whatthe hell is going on. Still, a big fellow stand¬ing next to me, who dressed and looked alotlike the stereotypical dorky math major,loved it. He got a big kick out of the juxtapo¬sitions, grunting and jumping around atevery switch of style and temperament. Iwish I could have done that too, because it’s not that I don’t apprthat I don’t under:came away thinking tmuch more considersit in the past — and 1show.— FSfeubticIfifoftr Ifote? ft la; Iftafefcve bean waiting for,feet Ranking Roger ;bfeferi working on srnc<&ud of trie summer ofsaante to ba a prqgraipossess a musical^less” antf “Sugaranri cats prtBeat. Stiff, the musicmggaa sojraf tost mthe English Beat’s suehe moving away fromon $pBQ&t Beat $&b&ptayS what Dave mbantffowsrttedrifts own* Howeverveto be a su&cesx.Sc‘Tenderness” 3hd;NSte8»?al: Public a fotenlion of its members,ftjbmfeers* Mick Jones# toe altar Jctofes d.fuif-hme member, rafh«ter Ail to all, Siaafetititries remtmsoent of;tfoj&e enougfe'^'-isatopeeling General tallthat feaferi. For those \peota&ons, Aff ihe BaicentetotHwary music. -Dave Wakeling and RaniElvis: A Golden Celeholy, holy — This :Torah for teens, its gits cellophane shrink-tures of Elvis — ElvElvis sitting on the flElvis with his baby,Hosannah! RecordingBerle show, Elvis orElvis at home, on Edsissippi-Alabama FailRoger Brown The Modi4—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALappreciate the idea, it’s justiderstand the motivation. Iing the man’s music is worth'deration than I’ve ever givenind that means it was a goodi|M> Seali Isnsr\ for, General Pooler the pro*J«r and Dave Wafting fcave'afnee they left to Beat at to..fr of ta8& ftaicafty, ft? atona>gre£$iqfi of -tea Seat's ssfmd'f SmYteet many of to songs# f&umskuni o# **|46Pfrand $tres&#* Of coarse, Boge*:-& presto to best to to the.jt$fe to a toimet laefe of tof was tespspsibfe for much of■ spdeess. Th® Seat seemadtoft»n toft Yegyae mot? sottobut Alt the fteg&.b and^ogsr ware steering towar, AHlhd Page should pro*U Soto of toto5ks, aitoti a$a Putto* witf itomtore=$s§Bw without fhereputs*to 0hf to subject of bandoesdfcC&iafe toe plays goiterll’did oof <jptoafo:f5eoome>fa&Sjr, bo ifc bitted as a goapialbum has a sound which is at,;bf|^Bogtfsh 8ao||ye|lf|isatisfy tieao too who am ox*htblte' to bo a continuation ofso who oo not too ouch ox*Bag*- Is a likeable exorcise InRanking Roger of General Pub'ic'elebration (RCA. 1984) Holy,is six-volume box set is aIs golden case a sacred Ark,■ink-wrap a holy shroud. Pic-Elvis singing, Elvis eating,ie floor, Elvis with his mom,>y, Elvis with no shirt on —lings like Elvis on the Miltoni on the Steve Allen Show,Ed Sullivan and at the Mis-Fair and Dairy Show! Five Elvis Contemplates Apple Pieversions each of Love Me Tender, Blue SuedeShoes, and Don’t Be Cruel, plus six versions ofHeartbreak Hotel and a whopping seven ver¬sions of Hound Dog! Did the man never rest —what a saint! Highlights, however, are the“Interviews with Fans’’ track. At the DairyShow:Announcer: Are you an Elvis fan?Fan: (Breathlessly) Oh, yes.Announcer: Well, what do you like aboutElvis?Fan: Oh, everything.Announcer: I noticed you trying to climb up onthe stage — what were you trying to do?Fan: (Surprised) To git Elvis!Godlike. Simply godlike.— SBAftoto Arts PtQmi' Monthtyitagasa&te,IS&Uft "f i 1 _! What an idea; a magazine on cassette torpeople who don’t ito lb read Of look at pic¬tures, the first Issue contains ah interviewwith Phillip Glass, advice on investing inAmerican Art from a Mew York art dealer^and a. Discussion pn the American Theaterwith Brendan GUI, Norris Houghton, and A.B,"’Pete1' Gurney. Jr, The Gfass interview is likenothing so much as a PBS television specialwithout pictures. 11 follows the formula so clo¬sely that ft‘$ clear what the shots would be ifit was On tv. the art dealer mostly recom¬mends talking to other art dealers beforebuying anything — a sort of failed Ah ThmgsConsidered segment. Who would buy some¬thing fto this? Highbrow safes people whpspend' their whole days in cars and don't knowwhat to do between Morning Edition and AtiThings Crmstew&ft doggers who want to runto Brendan Gill? ft-tots me. i use magazinesas a kind of distraction, where tong soma-tog id hold my visual afttotehte &ai as sft-portent as something to engage my mind. 1say wait lor the Videomagassette. ~-KWmmnmmnnmmSlodern Story of Life: A Civics Diatribe 1982 from New Art New Art Edited by Phyllis Freeman, Eric Himmel,Edith Pavese, and Anne Yarowsky (Harry N.Abrams, 1984).This book is very large, flashy, up-to-the-minute new, featuring only work more recentthan 1980. Apparently designed to have abroad appeal (read: low budget) the book isconspicuously lacking in critical essays and isprinted on newsprint, whichis just fine withme. Only a couple of the 118 artists repre¬sented (by one to three works apiece) suffersfrom poor or low-contrast reproduction.Sculptures, paintings, photographs, installa¬tions and conceptual pieces are included.Some works of special interest are the mon¬tages of Barbara Krueger, a video installa¬tion by Laurie Anderson, multi-media worksby Jenny Holzer, and various pieces by Keith“Herring’’ Haring. Also prominently figuredare works of Sandro Chia, Francesco Cle¬mente, Enzo Cucchi, Mario Merz, and MimmoPaladino, all Italian neo-expressicnists whohad a group show at the Cubural Center, co¬sponsored by our own Reniassance Society,all summer long. Roger Brown, Jim Nutt andEd Paschke, Chicago Imagists who have allshown recently at the Hyde Park Art Center,are also included. Works by Georg Baselitz,Susan Rothenberg, Kenny Scharf and JulianSchnabel, all of whom have shown at the Ren¬iassance Society in the last year, are includ¬ed, as are photographs of Robert Mappleth¬orpe and Cindy Sherman, who have workedat the Art Institute right now. These artists ofspecial interest to Chicago residents are onlya fraction of the artists featured in this excit¬ing book — I strongly recommend it to anyonefamiliar with these works or interested incatching up.— SBDonald Sultan Steers. Nov. 18, 1983 from ,Vew Artm. and GH Uwhich are aka versions ofseomingfy chosen for no restor very unlikeliness — eonEurythmics Sexcrime (nineteen eightyfour)(RCA records)This single from the soundtrack of the soonto be released film 1984 is a sad example ofuninspired technopop at its very worst. Thesong is all filler with no content. Annie Len¬nox’s voice is all full of sturm und drang butthere’s no soul behind it. Whoever mixed thesong threw in every dance song gimmick inthe book, especially lots of echoing, -ing, -ing,-ing, -ing, -ing, -ing...And lots and lots and lotsand lots of repetition — through out the whole song a squeeky little voice box intonesthe phrase “Nineteeneightyfour,” over andover again as if we didn’t get the point, orshould I say, the Message. The flip side is an¬other lackluster effort by Lennox and Stew¬art, “I Did it All the Same.’ Here at least thesoulfulness of sound matches the husky sensu¬ousness of Lennox’s voice. Both tunes aredanceable but that’s about it. One star — BMStood end guts m ft!gfc schoolTtus is aft I know - 5 kspersedpoems. A fto stoes-W of to'terror andto readern§ to $qm, Jdmy, and her abuse anddiseases and poverty and dfefress. To cate¬gorize to experiences described m to bookby to stove sterite torary terms, fidwow-er, does dtoervto to to aotorts metotfehOfEtostretBd escaghoby of gruesome sex-gfH eiHd' vfptsoNT Imagery,- ih&rr|?lgsifCishPijffidiki and graphic end gfptesi|tte §§|hJlsftc vfston. 1 1 | IThe effect of the book is not the alienationef to reader, bet rator an intimately gnp-pfng .revulsion- to read this took is to softerand be destroyed by one's own sensffcvhy toto created character. The took is a brilliantconsideration of masochism, because it usesthe reader’s sensitivity to hurt to reader,making to reader Into a masochist, andthereby compelling to reader to understandmasochism in a disturbingly real way.When to reader, like Janey, is complete*/broken and reduced to the fundamentally ma¬sochistic state. Acker completes her strangetask by offering a toe light — ray of tope,perhaps.’ 'm the form of a drawing aboutdreams or a guiet poem, or at to end, thedresmy tragseehden! death sequence of tomain character, iAcker only offers enoughlight, however, f& make you feel like you'rea! to bottom of a pile of garbage hying toJig your way out. Mot for everyone, certain-ijfi Sits hook offers * unlgee experience gfthose who are open to ft.—SSWe are dreaming of sex,of thieves, murderers,firebrands,of huge thighs openingto us like this night.1Poem/Drawing by Kathy Acker from BloodAnc Juts In High SchoolHE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16 . 964—5'UNIVERSITY CAR %RENTAL5508 SO. LAKE PARK241-6200LATE MODEL DOMESTIC CARSSAFE FOR HIGHWAY DRIVINGAUTO TRANS - AIR COND. - RADIODAILY OR WEEKLY RATESWE RE #3!10% DISCOUNT WITH U of C I.D.0This Autumn (and Winter)Fall in with aGood DealREALLY SUPERS88Vz ’x11', 20 LB. WHITE BONDEXTRA SERVICE2 SIDED COPIES. REDUCTIONS. 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I D.The University of Chicago BookstoreOffice Machines & Photographic Dept.970 East 58th Street 2nd Floor Mi962-7558 • 5-4364 (ON CAMPUS)History, Philosophy& Social Studiesof Science & MedicineINVITES HiPSS STUDENTS AND PROSPECTIVE STUDENTSFOR AN INFORMAL MEETING WITH THE FACULTYProf. David Raup, Chairman of the Department ofGeophysical Sciences, will give an informal talk:“Creeps and Jerks in biological evolution.’’4:30TUESDAY20 NOVEMBER 1984J.H. FRANKLIN ROOMSS2246—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALPhotos by Susan Kiluk-MartinSUICIDE NOTEby Alex KolkerIn the Sunday Tribune on page one therewas an article about six teenagers whocommitted suicide in Clear Lake City,Texas within a single two-month period. Iread the article, cut it out, and put it up onthe wall above my desk. When my room¬mate asked me why, I told him it was be¬cause I felt sorry for them. “Well, I don'tfeel sorry for them,” he told me. “I don’tfeel sorry for anyone who has as little re¬spect for himself as that."Well, roomie, it’s hard to have respectfor yourself when no one else respectsyou.Imagine, for instance, realizing thatyou're not as good a person as you shouldbe. You're not as good a student, you’renot as good a friend, you’re not as good ahuman being. You don’t have a boy/girl¬friend. All around you a ♦ellow studentsdoing the things that yc vant to be ableto do, and doing them much better thanyou can. Everyone tells you when you aredoing something wrong, and they all giveyou advice on what you have to do to im¬prove yourself. No one, however, tells youwhen you do something right. Your gradesare slipping, or are out-and-out bad. Youaren’t living up to your parents’ expecta¬ tions, or your own. There are a lot of peo¬ple who hate you, or compete with you,and you find it hard to make friends. Youfeel uncomfortable or left out in socialgatherings. You’ve begun to worry aboutwhat you are going to do with your life,and whether you will actually be able toaccomplish anything at all.Not that I actually was considering sui¬cide. But for that one instant this summerdeath looked a little better to me than itever had before. Fortunately I never evencame close to putting a razor blade to mywrist, but I’ve known a few people whohave. Most of the problems and worriesthey had that led them to such an end Ihave already listed. Not to say that allteenage suicides can be attributed to acommon cause. Many teen and college-agepeople, however, have these types ofproblems and worries, and in some cases,including the C.lear Lake City suicides,these people kill themselves. These prob¬lems are serious, and deserve serious con¬sideration. They are much more than just ateenage “phase.”That’s what my mother, the psychoana¬lyst, told me about my depression:“You're at the right age to be goingthrough this, "she said. But putting me into a psychological group she had hoped tomake me feel better, but she succeededonly in convincing me that she wasn’t in¬credibly- worried about my. problems. Shehad written it off to me and to herself as aphase that would pass. But telling a de¬pressed person that his problems are in¬significant or transitory does little to con¬vince them of that fact. It convinces themmerely that you don’t take them or theirproblems seriously, which is destructiverather than constructive. .A lot of people tried to trivialize myproblems this summer. My father, for in¬stance, told me that I shouldn’t get de¬pressed at all. “Whenever you get de¬pressed,” he told me, “just think about allof the good things you’ve got. Think ofhow well-off and secure your family is, andwhat a happy childhood you've had.” Hetold me this, as if a fortunate up-bringingcould shield one from sadness. I hadn’t theheart to tell him that a lot of teens whocommit suicide come from “good families.”In Clear Lake City, for instance, where thetechnicians and engineers for NASA'sHouston Space Center live, the median an¬nual income is $31,000 The area housesrun for between $70,000 and $110,000 invalue. It has also been noted that in ClearLake City, the scholastic and parental ex¬pectations run too high for many of thechildren to deal with. Children-are expect¬ed to do as well as if not better than theirsuccessful and highly intelligent parents. I did not throw myself off the top of IdaNoyes Hall after writing this “suicidenote,” but I could have done it — I couldhave done it easily, using as much mentaland muscular energy as many people willuse in turning the page to ignore this let-,ter. I do not plan to commit suicide at thistime; my problems and worries have notdriven me quite that far. But there arepeople, lonely people, here at the U of C,who are desperate and depressed enoughto consider suicide. It is to these peoplethat this letter is directed. I don’t pretendto have the answer to their problems, noram I going to join the ranks of those whohave given them advice on what theyshould do about their problems. A goodfriend once told me that depressed peoplewant sympathy, not advice, and with thisin mind I just want to tell those people towhom this letter is written that there arepeople who care about them and aboutwhat happens to them.I did not wish to trivialize the six sui¬cides in Clear Lake City by using them inthis letter. I feel that there is an infinitesadness in those deaths — in that the teen¬agers were so deperate, and that they feltthat they had nowhere else to turn. Onecannot help but feel sad for the six whoare dead, but maybe my roommate isright. Maybe it is too late to feel sorry forthe dead.Maybe it is past time that we startedthinking about the living.THE GREY CITY JOURNAL—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1984—7MARTY: COMIC CASUALNESS, EMOTIONAL RESONANCEby David SullivanTheater does not present ideas, it pres¬ents people. When playwrights lose sightof this basic premise they begin to writefinished products that are designed to beread, not acted. A play must evolve as adialogue both between the characters thatthe playwright has created, and the actorsthat embody these characters. If this dia¬logue ever dries up the characters becomemere symbols, and not people.Modern drama was a movement that at¬tacked the artificiality of the stage, thearbitrary nature of narrative, and the as¬sumed comprehensibleness of language.The idea that our words could communicateat all was doubted. And if words couldnever bridge our isolation in the world,how could playwrights ever understandtheir characters as separate from them¬selves? The works of Brecht, Ionesco, andothers, became parables of art’s limita¬tions and people’s separations. They werehonest in admitting the dishonesty of allart. What they sought was an art that wasbanal, uninteresting, self-defacing, andtherefore provocative. The questions werenot raised in the plays, but hopefully with¬in the audiences themselves.In the recent proliferation of theatergroups on campus we have seen a surfeitof energy, enthusiasm, and moderndrama. At its best this type of drama canbe a rigerous examination of our mostbasic assumptions, and when acted well itpresents characters floundering in a worldthat has no final form. At its worst, the plays become pedantic lectures, and thecharacters struggle to understand whatthey're not supposed to be. To write theseplays and maintain artistic control is diffi¬cult, to put them on is almost impossible.Marty is a simple, everyday fable thatworks within the constraints of charactertheater, and for that reason this is an ad¬mirable production. There is a self-con-ciously simple-minded compassion at workhere, Paddy Chayevsky shows us our¬selves as we would like to see ourselves.These are characters with good hearts,who, if they do sometimes behave meanly,do so because of the prejudices built intotheir environment. There are no foreign el¬ements here, nothing jars our comfortableintimacy with the characters onstage. Thisis a tale. And like all tales it has its simplemoral which we already memorized fromthe thousand-and-one times that we haveheard it before.If this all sounds like a cloying CaryGrant comedy, it is, but like one of his com¬edies the smoothness of the execution de¬lights us. Because of the obvious plot it isnot the playwright that we concentrate on,but the actors. The actors in this prod¬uction have a kind of affinity with theircharacters and each other rarely seen onthis campus. This affinity is emphasized bythe easy flowing dialogue that is firmlyrooted in the comedic episodes of every¬day life.Mother: This was one, two, threedays ago. Wednesday. Be¬cause I went to the fruit shopon Wednesday, and I camehome. And I come arounna back, and there's yourmother sitting onna stepsonna porch. And I say:“Catherine, my sister,wad da you doing here?”And she look uppa me, andshe beganna cry.The emotional resonance and comic casu¬alness of this type of speech lies in its sim¬plicity. The words are not based on an in¬tellectual idea, or even a structuralnecessity, they are simply the closestChayevsky can come to the speech hehears in everyday life.These lines, however, would have no res¬onance if the character that spoke themwas not a projection of an aging, good-hearted woman. It is because Elaine Gott¬lieb, who plays the mother, has a superbsense of timing, and a capacity to make usfeel her thoughts even while she says noth¬ing, that our compassion is aroused. Hercontrol of the.Jiming in each of her scenesalso serves to reinforce her image as thewell-meaning controller others’ lives; weknow her.Similarly, Shelley Daniels portrayal ofthe dumpy heroine, Clara, is marvelouslyeffective. Despite the pathos of her linesintended to reveal the good soul behindthe mundane surface, she manages to ex¬tract some real emotion. Her role was per¬haps the most difficult to transform into abelievable one because of its stereotypednature, but even a line like “I’m going tojust lie on my bed and think about you”which is rife wth the objectionable charac¬terization of the pathethic passive female,becomes a statement of the truth. No mat¬ ter how ridiculous the line may be, Shelleyrefuses to let us laugh at Clara's desper¬ate loneliness.The last person that invests their charac¬ter with a roundness that goes beyond thebrief sketch of the play, is Barry Endick,who plays Marty. He is a believable butch¬er, head down, stocky, with close croppedhair and a strong physical presence. Whenhe sits down to eat dinner he shovels in theItalian lasagna with ravenous thought¬lessness. We never feel Marty thinks toomuch, he reacts to those around him in asimple and natural way. When, for in¬stance, Clara informs him of her interest hebeams as if he could not contain his insidehappiness. The smile lasts through thewhole scene until it becomes comical, aschoolboy’s infectious grin.The other supporting roles are wellplayed, though they suffer from the vary¬ing thickness of the Italian accents. Theone standout is Mark Toma who playsAngie, the bar chum of Marty, with re¬laxed casualness and a sure sense of tim¬ing. The set by James Kenney adapts tothe wide variety of scenes with deft econ¬omy, forming an unobtrusive backdrop tothe narrative.This is a small play and a quiet prod¬uction, but that is its point. The clean pre¬sentation of small-minded laughable char¬acters is an accomplishment, when theideas are already known, the play itselfmust take us in. Marty does. Perhaps thequestion it raises about our theater is whydoes it always struggle so hard? A fable,well told, can be enough, and before youcan act out ideas, you must learn how toact.DONT BE A MISSING PERSONWE NEED YOU AT A VERY IMPORTANT BRUNCHCOPY DUE SUNDAY NIGHT FOR SPECIAL TUESDAY ISSUEPLUS VERY IMPORTANT PRE-ELECTION MEETINGSUNDAY 1230 1642 E 5GTH NO. 707 DONT MISS BRUNCH OR WE'LL MISS YOU8—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1984—THE GREY CITY JOURNALiautiful Eyes are youiWi contact lensesDr. Kurt Rosenbaum493-8372 752-1KIMBARK PLAZADaily: 9-6; Sat: 9-3:30; By appointmentm m-w For CompleteDental 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 acceptedG.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 / - \DR. M. R. MASLOVOPTOMfTVIST• EYE EXAMINATIONS• FASHION EYEWEAR• ALL TYPES OFCONTACT LENSES• CONTACT SUPPLIESTHE HYDE PARKSHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th363-6100mr MARK LIQUORS 8 WINE SHOPPEXVui4 East SSftl Street • In Kiabark SALE 040$ 11/20/44In Kinfork Plaza 41HH5MOOSEHEAD6-12 6*. BOTTLES$329 BECK’S6-12 o*. BOTTLES3/’10°° BUDWEISER24-12 o*. CANS BLATZ6^12 oz. CANS*7” 2/*3WINES$2”UEBFRAUMILCH 750 *tM3 nerotTB michusbubg <4)99RIESUNG-KABINET •» « AITALIANnmwORVIETO CLASStCO «MiBAROMCHIANTI 7so*ntNCnOtCXIOt DUeOEUfBEAUJOLAIS 50 ~CHATEAUDE GOURGAZAUD 750 *SPAKKUNO WINtSCOOK’S CHAMPAGNE 3/MO $499$209$459$599$399CREST A BLANCCHAMPAGNE *5 99 ICXJIS M MARTINI 19*0CABERNET SAUV1GN0N 750 -DRY CRSK I9B0 $799CABERNET SAUVKJNON 750« * fCHATEAU LA SALLE so~JUG WINESINGLENOOKWINES 5 LITERAUGUST SEBASTIANICOUNTRY WINES1.5 LITERSILVER TRAILWINES4 0 LITERSSPIRITSBOOC*£'s CQ99GIN liter CANADIAN <f9aCLUB 7» ml *0GORDON’S #m00GIN 750 m, *4yy CANADIANMIST 775 im *IUSTOUCHNA Y A 0700vodka som, *7yv WANT'S CX 09SCOTCH 750 ml.JIM BEAM CX. 09BLACK LAB& 750*0 CAPTAIN MORGAN X O ORUM 750 ml *4yySMIRNOFF SffSSVODKA..75LITER MYERS $799 .RUM 750 mi. ^I^JUACA7»„, $10" WHITE LABEL $Q99750 ml V• Iumi* (tom ionPEPSI COLA, 2 LITER PLASTIC Ml* W Ban Tom. Smmkr,. Noc MMwgtw 38th Annual Latke-hamentashSymposiumThe Anthropological, Artistic,Economical, humanistic, andScientific Implications of the 3500-year-old Feud Between TheseGastronomic Delicacies.MODERATOR:Prof. Joel M. SnyderPARTICIPANTS:Ms. Irene Conley Prof. Robert W. FogelProf. Ralph W. Nicholas Prof. Herman L. SinaikoTuesday, November 20,7:30 p.m.Cloister Club at Ida Noyes Hall; 1212 E. 59thAfter the program, Latkes, Hamentashen, SourCream, Apple Sauce and Cider will be servedat Hillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn. Contribution: $125752-1127CENTER FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIESAtThe University of ChicagopresentsTwo lectures byDirector, Institut Dominicain d’EtudesOrientalesMonday, November 19 “POLTICS AND RELIGION IN THEMIDDLE EAST” Pick 218, 4:15 pmTuesday, November 20 “MEDIEVAL ISLAMICDEVELOPMENTS OF GREEKPHILOSPHY AND SCIENCE” Pick218, 4:00pmScliwan CTABVIODON'T JUST HIGHLIGHT IT,“BOSS"!T!Refutablepocket model.Put STABILO BOSS to work andget attention. "BOSSING” ishighlighting at its best.Memos, computer printouts,books, graphs, maps. Tocolor-code or emphasize,"BOSS” them all!Insist on the original.STABILO BOSS,transparent ink in8 fluorescentcolors. Sleek newSTABILO BOSS 2,with pocket clipand refills, 4fluorescent colors.Create a lasting impressionwith Schwan-STABILO. Schwan-STABILO USAPO Box 2193, Peachtree City, GA 30269For nearest dealer call (800) 241-7803in Georgia dial (404) 487-5512The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16. 1984—17Michael Reese Health Planinvites you toCheck us outWe offer:o' Affordable ratesnr Convenient evening and Saturday hoursS'S'Bftif Full coverage of doctor’s office visits andphysical check'ups.Full coverage of surgery, maternity care,hospital care, lab tests and x-rays.No doctor bills. No deductibles. No paper¬work. Just full-service, high quality healthcare.Easy-to-use Walgreens prescription drugbenefit—you pay only $3 per prescription. Eyeglasses As ofjan. 1,1985, eyeglasses willbe provided at no charge.(One pair ofcorrective lenses and frames per member/ every two years.)Wrl Well-qualified doctors and excellenthospitals including Michael Reese Hospital,West Suburban Hospital, South ChicagoCommunity Hospital and Little Company> of Mary HospitalLSfl Full emergency care coverage—any time,j, anywhere in the world.IjLJ Your own personal physician and theback-up specialists when you need them.Check us out at theHealth Center of your choice:Evergreen9435 S. Western Ave.ChicagoWednesday, Nov. 146-7 pm Oak Park .1515 N. Harlem Ave.Oak ParkTuesday, Nov. 136-7 pm Lake Shore2545 King Dr.ChicagoCall 842-2936to schedule anindividual tour. Southeast2315 E. 93rd St.\ChicagoCall 842-2936to schedule anindividual tour.For moreinformationcall 842-2936If—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984BLOOM COUNTY by Berke BreathedStun guns are taboo at San DiegoGrossmont Community College sincethe Trustees forbade the 15,000 stu¬dents to carry then after realizing theyare a “potential Problem ”The guns are a rather expensive fadat $70-$90 apiece. They emit a $50,000volt charge which stuns victims for upto 15 minutes. The school’s securitychief said the guns are so new that hisdepartment hasn’t even seen them.Students caught with the guns willget a warning on the first offense anddisciplinary action on the secona.* * *Body building for the mind? A Uni¬versity of Iowa professor has written abook called Mental Training for PeakPerformance which lays out a pro¬gram for “mind development.”The book covers tension control,body awareness, powers of the mind,self-rejuvenation, cognitive restructur¬ing, team building, sports psyching,success fear, failure fear, and peakperformance psyching.The author has been a consultant formany of Iowa’s teams in the past fewyears, and is particularly interested inpreparing athletes better mentally forgames.* * *Amherst, MA will now be a ‘nuclearfree zone ’ after opponents ga ve up. TheChancellor of UMass at Amherst origi¬nally was against the proposal butchanged his mind after the proposalwas reworded. A five member commit¬tee will monitor the compliance.Harvard and MIT profs opposed asimilar proposal last year in Cam¬bridge, MA. tmuFeNeersSPIRITUALITY. YEP.THAT'S IT. I MW but men one?I MEAN, MRE'SA LOT RIP/NOON THIS.usm, mum mouop...MAOAM, 1 KNOWI THINK ' mrrmYOU HAVE TW)f PVTmmwrKm misHfim//-/£. OH, ITS ACONSUMER'SCHCCMV NIGHTMARE.m *yellon ioo manyPAGES’? BRANP NAMES. HU JOININGINOULPN'T 'CM ALL.me ANY ICHANCES. .r imA&w kiNORPS FM THAT MAh*MVe A C0ToFwr>ws~ALor Mof tour tucmHHmMiVTHIS IS "SLY FOX one".7BLL WEINBERGERTHAT OUR BARS SAYime s IF THE SIXTH FLEETNO "CAP" ISN'T FULLER SACKAT THIS FROM mBALTIC,HUM-- WE'LL Be FACINGOPERATION BIG BANG]WITH TUB SOVIETSIN IZmures!!HEWLETT PACKARD OFFERS THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 45% OFFON PRINTERS AND PLOTTERS FORYOUR IBM PC OR CAMPATIBLESLASERJET PRINTER* Letter quality printwithout the noise* At 8 pages per minutewe’re 8-10 times fasterthan the competition‘Multiple fonts available(Greek/Math available in Dec.)‘Easy maintenance(no messy ribbons to replace)**Only $1,92225** THINK JET PRINTER* Ink-jet technology(pleasantly quiet)‘Extremely Compact(weighs but 5 pounds)* 150 characters per second‘Texts and Graphics‘Epson Mx80 emulation**Only $27225**%HEWLETT PACKARD PLOTTERS“The Fastest and Most Accurate in theirPrice Range. Plots Paper and Transparency.”2 PEN ONLY $60225**6 PEN ONLY $1,04225**8 PEN ONLY $3,31500**(with auto sheet feed)DON'T MISS OUT - ORDER TODAY!For Further Information Contact: Joe Fratto@ 312/357-8800, Departmental purchasesonly please. Textbook DepartmentUniversity of Chicago Bookstore970 E. 58th St.962-7116Textbook Orders forWinter Quarter.November 30th is thedeadline for Winter 85textbook orders.If you are teaching nextquarter, please send us yourorder today.The Chicago Maroon—Friday. November 16. 1984—19THE FLAMINGO APARTMENTS5500 South Shore DriveSTUDIOS & ONE BEDROOMS•Unfurnished and furnished•U. of C. Bus Stop•Free Pool Membership•Carpeting and Drapes Included•Secure Building - Emily's Dress Shop•University Subsidy for Students & Staff•Delicatessen •Beauty Shop•Barber Shop •T.J.'s Restaurant•Dentist •Valet ShopFREE PARKINGMr. K«ll*r 752*3800UNCLAIMEDSTORAGE GOODSFOR SALEFurniture-Appliances - TVsBeds - Much, MuchMore!THl’R. - SUN. 12 P.M. till 5 P.M.917 E. 63rd St.(312) 684-9095 PREPARE FOR:GMATTEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SMCE 1938Call Days. Eves& WeekendsDIAL-A-TEST HOTLINE (312) 508-0106ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 437-6650CHICAGO CENTER 764-5151HIGHLAND PARK 433-7410LA GRANGE CENTER 352-5840Ptnnmal CaMan I. Mart Tha. 121 Mi*! U S Cmu ft AftraatTar Mlarmihaa ataai aMai crManOUTSIDE N T STATE CALL TOLL FREE MO 723 1712In New Vbrti State Sunley H Kaplan Educational Center lid II1I1 JAMESGUSTAFSONUniversity Preacherand Professor ofTheological Ethics inthe Divinity Schooland the Coaimitteeon Social ThoughtS ROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPELMemorial SundayNov. 188:30 a.m.EcumenicalService ofHolyCommunion11:00 a.m.UniversityReligionsService IADS: iONE TERRIFIC BARGAIN!Two bedrooms, two baths, ex¬cellent condition, carpeting,security and convenient to alltransportation and shopping.$45,900. A must see!PRICE REDUCED! FHA ap¬proved building. This twobedroom condo in a lovely cour¬tyard building may be just theright starter home. Modern kit¬chen and bath, and minutes fromcampus, plus low assessmentsand taxes keep the monthly costsfor this unit quite affordable.40’s.PRICE ADJUSTMENT! Love¬ly, large one bedroom near cam¬pus, shopping, and park. Thedesigner decor, modem kitchen,and sun porch make this unitvery attractive. 40’s.SCHOOL’S IN SESSION atRay School where your childcould be enrolled if you live inthis lovely two bedroom condonear park, shopping andtransportation. On the sunnysideof the building where all therooms have southern windows -You can’t miss enjoying the fallin Hyde Park. Modem kitchen,lovely sunporch, hardwoodfloors and more. Call for ap¬pointment to see. 50’s.PRICE ADJUSTMENT! Newlydecorated, ready for fall oc¬cupancy. This one bedroom co¬operative has lovely naturalwood, formal dining room, andvintage kitchen. Lowassessments and low price makethis unit perfect for single orcouple. $19,500.HILO REALTY GROUP1365 E. 53rd St.956-1800OUR FAMOUS STUFFED PIZZA IN THE PANIS NOW AVAILABLE IN HYDE PARKOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK11 AM T012 MIDNIGHTCocktails • Pleasant Dining • Pick-Up"Chicago's best pizza!” — Chicago Magazine, March 1977“The ultimate in pizza!” — New York Tlmaa, January 19805311 S. Blackstone947-0200 Put 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 caffStudios, One, Two and Three Bedroom ApartmentsOne Bedroom from $545 - Two Bedroom from $755Rent includes -heat, cooking gas, and master TV antenna1642 Em 56th Street'hi Hyde Park, acme the park fromThe Museum of Science and IndustryEqual Housing Opportunity Managed by Metroplex, Inc.20—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984Veteran men’s basketball faces tough scheduleBy Frank LubyWhen Maroon men’s varsity basket¬ball coach John Angelus has a deserv¬ing, unusually talented team, he’llchallenge it with several strong Divi¬sion I and Division II opponents. Thisyear Angelus — with 12 returning let-termen on the squad — has put togetherwhat he calls “the toughest schedule inmodern U of C basketball history’’ andadded that “the talent’s there to makethis a very competitive college team.”The Maroons begin that schedule to¬morrow at 3 p.m. in Henry Crown FieldHouse against Grand Rapids BaptistCollege, whom the Maroons defeated68-50 in last year’s opener. That contestprecedes a tough December schedulewhich Angelus hopes will prepare histeam for its two strongest Midwest con¬ference opponents, St. Norbert and Be¬loit, in the first two weeks of January.“We’ve got to be ready to play someball in those two games,” Angelus said.“That’s our whole season right there.”St. Norbert, ranked eighth in the nationin Division III at the close of the confer¬ence schedule last year, representedthe Midwest in the Division III tourna¬ment last year. The Green Knightsbarely defeated the Maroons in HCFHlast year, 57-50, and the Knights havelost All-Conference and potential All-American forward Joe Emmerich tograduation.The Norbert game is January 5 inHCFH, and one week later the Maroonshost the 1983 conference champions,the Beloit Buccaneers, whom they de¬feated 53-51 at home last season.That high-powered December sched¬ule starts December 8 when theMaroons travel to Evanston to face theBig Ten Northwestern Wildcats. Aftera home game against Concordia (MI)on the 15th, Chicago heads west toWashington to play St. Martin’s Collegeand Puget Sound University. The finalacid test before the Norbert gamecomes on the 29th against Division INorthern Iowa, which just missed a bidto the NIT last season.The only piece missing from Ange-lus’s basketball puzzle is a sixth man,so he may expect “30 minutes or more” per game from his starting lineup. Se¬nior Keith Libert, a first team MidwestConference selection last year, returnsto anchor the veteran lineup. The 6-6center from Oak Lawn, IL averaged16.8 points per game last year and fin¬ished third in the conference rebound¬ing race with 8 per game. Also return¬ing is senior co-captain NickMeriggioli, who has previously earnedhonorable mention All-Conferencehonors at forward.Two sophomores, 6-5 David Witt and6-4 Tom Redburg, will compete forstarting positions at forward. Red-burg’s strong rebounding earned himextensive playing time last year, whileWitt worked his way into the startinglineup with his early season contribu¬tions as a sixth-man last year.In the backcourt Angelus projectssophomore 6-1 Mike Clifford as astarter, and counts on the return of 6-0sharpshooter Rob Omiecinski, whoaveraged 12.8 points per game in1983-84. “Robbie is about 90 percentright now,” Angelus said. “The touch isthere, but the strength and endurancehaven’t quite come around.”Off the bench Angelus has Tom Lepp,who “has looked good so far,” alongwith forwards Adam Green and FrankCaeser. Angelus plans to play Caeseron the wings, and move Green outsideagainst some opponents. “In some ofthe big games Adam can’t play inside.He’s very strong, and I think we’d getbetter use from him on the wings.”Mike Medina, a 5-10 guard and a Chi¬cago native, will also come off thebench, as will the only two additions tothe 1984-85 team, freshman Mike Wad-man and sophomore Keith Vaux.The only veteran who did not returnas expected is John Froschauer, whoplayed sixth and seventh man and spot-started as a freshman last year.Angelus mentioned, though, that“we’re not very deep” and stressedagain the importance of playing aschedule with “more resistance” inorder to prepare the team for the twoimportant conference games, and theimportance of having a sixth man.“Beloit has a sixth man, and St. Nor- Senior co-captain Nick Meriggioli, known for his wide open style ofplay, returns to the forward-guard position this season.bert has a seventh man,” said Angelus,who told a story about his team’s lastencounter with Monmouth College theyear Monmouth won the NCAA Divi¬sion III title.“We had a packed house for thatgame (at HCFH) and we didn’t have allthat good a team, but we took them intodouble overtime. The sixth man didit.”The MCAC coaches’ poll places Chi¬cago third behind St. Norbert and Be¬loit for this season, but Angelus’stougher schedule may produce a teamthat will surprise some people. “If the fans want to see a competitivecollege basketball team,” said Ange¬lus, “they shouldn’t miss us thisyear.”VARSITY SCHEDULESMen’s BasketballNov. 17 Sat.—Grand RapidsNov. 24 Sat.-IIT Away3 p.m.Home7:30 p.m.Nov. 27 Tues.—Lake Forest Home7:30 p.m.The Third StringThe Houston Oilers’ victory over Kansas City lastweek leaves the Buffalo Bills as the only winlessteam in the NFL and the leading candidate for thisyear’s number one pick in the draft this spring. TheBills, who have various holes to fill, may not benefitfrom this position. As of now the Bills will have theprime pick in one of the worst drafts ever for offen¬sive players, (barring any Supreme Court ruling).No franchise running backs are available this year,and the pickings at quarterback look pretty slim aswell. Heisman candidate Doug Flutie from BostonCollege is said to have pro-potential, but this is debat¬able.Flutie himself might try a flight to the USFL, butwith all the financial problems of that league, I thinkthat the CFL would be the best place for Flutie. TheCFL’s moving pocket suits Flutie’s style and his size.I know that Flutie leads the NCAA in career offen¬sive yardage, but most of these yards came on roll¬ing jump passes which get to receivers just in time.I mentioned the problems of the USFL because it isbecoming apparent that the once promising league isheaded for oblivion. This week they had to canceltheir league meeting because of a lawsuit against theformer Michigan club, the Panthers, brought by thePontiac Silverdome. This suit will probably be thefirst in a long line of litigation, since the league hasdecided to consolidate their franchises. In doing so,the USFL will be breaking many stadium contracts.Michigan and Oklahoma are moving to Oakland.Philadelphia is moving to Baltimore, and other fran¬chise moves are still in the air.The USFL has decided to go to a fall schedule in1986, and this will also contribute to the moving aboutand confusion of franchises. The Express will have toleave Los Angeles because the Raiders play thereand the Rams play down the road. Other occupiedcities which will need to be evacuated are Houstonand Chicago. Besides causing instability in franchiselocation, the fall schedule puts USFL football indirect competition with high school and college, aswell as NFL football.In addition to the lawsuits, many franchises arestrapped with multi-million dollar contracts whichthey cannot afford to pay. Steve Young has a forty-million dollar pact with the Los Angeles Express, butthe Express drew only 20,000 fans per game lastyear. The Pittsburgh Maulers are in a similar situa¬tion with running back Mike Rozier.Donald Trump and his New Jersey Generals seem Flutie of the CFL?like the only sound and stable franchise. Yet, if theGiants kick him out of the Meadowlands, he can buildTrump City and move his team there...Here is a real scary scenario for NCAA officials:Both Nebraska and South Carolina lose their lastgames and the NCAA number one ranking is decidedin the Holiday Bowl where BYU will be the nation’sonly undefeated team. The Holiday Bowl is so earlythat quite a few people will tune out the real bowlgames on New Year’s Day, or thereabouts, with thechampionship having already been decided.—CFIn case you’re still interested, here’s the word onthe street for this week’s games.Detroit at ChicagoGary Danielson had a terrible game last week,going 18-41, three interceptions. However, the run¬ning game performed exceptionally well, averaging7.7 yards per rush. The defense also played respect¬ably, allowing Joe Theisman only 200 yards passing.If they can stop Walter Payton they can stay in thisgame.Steve Fuller had a good game last week against thetough Ram Defense. Walter Payton was stopped onthe ground, but performed well in catching the swingpass. The Bear defense had a lapse last week, butthey should be back to greet Danielson. Take theBears (-7).Rams and Greenbay at MilwaukeeEric Dickerson will have to play seven more yearsto break Payton’s record. This week he should get 150yards closer against the Packers. Jeff Kemp threwthe ball only 15 times last week, but he may break hismini-slump against the Pack. The Rams’ defensewas able to stop Payton, so Gerry Ellis should notpose much of a problem to them. They will have toget in on Lynn Dickey in order to stop James Lof¬ton.The Packers may think they have a playoff shot,but there are seven teams with as good or better re¬cords also vying for the two wild-card spots. Theyare due for a fall and this might be the week, as theywill finally face a good defense. It’s time to jump offthe Packer’s band wagon. Take the Rams (+2fy).Jets at HoustonFive points? That is what the Jets scored againstthe Colts. That was truly the shame of The City. Ho¬pefully the Jets will rebound against the even morelowly Oilers. In the Astrodome they will be assuredof dry weather, so maybe they can improve on their13 vards of offonsp last week The word on the streetThe Oilers finally picked up a win last week, sotheir season’s mission is over. Larry Moriarity (117yards rushing) and Warren Moon (19-26 passing)both turned in fine performances in Kansas City.This week they will come home and disappoint alltheir fans. Take the Jets (Al/z).Miami at San DiegoIs this the week the Dolphins will fall? I doubt it. Ifthey can win by blocking an extra point there is nostopping them. Marino had a bad week last weekthrowing for only 246 yards and 1 TD. This week hefaces San Diego's shoddy secondary. Johnny Unitasbetter watch out for his record.The Chargers managed to play almost 60 minutesof good football and still lost. When their defenseneeded to tighten they couldn't, and they were scoredon with 38 seconds left to lose to Denver. If Denvercould move so easily, then the Dolphins should flapwild in San Diego, fake the Dolphins (-7).Other games?Atlanta (-3Vfe) over ClevelandWhat ever happened to the Kardiac Kids?Dallas (-10) over BuffaloThe Bills scored their first offensive touchdown infour games last week. They are not due to scoreagain till Christmas.New England (-€*£) over IndianapolisBut no spread is safe if Art Schlichter is calling thesignals.St. Louis (pickem) over GiantsThe Giants can win the hard ones but not the bigones.Seattle (-4) over CincinnatiCincinnati will not be able to overcome the fivetournovers they will give to Seattle.Washington (-6) over PhiladelphiaTheisman has not been overly impressive lately,but he can always get the touchdown when he needsit.Raiders (-9) over Kansas CityTh Chiefs lost at home to the Oliers, and Jim Plun¬kett may be back.Minnesota ( + 10) over DenverI’ll break up all this monotony by predicting thatthe Bronco’s luck will end.Tampa Bay ( + 12) over San FranciscoMaybe the Bucs can hold the 49’ers under twoTD’s. — G. Last week: 6-7-0Craig FarberGussieThe Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16. 1984—21ApartmentShopping?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-$60/mo.Call Mr. Collins atSack Realty1167 E. 52nd ST4.5 room, heat, stove,refrigerator, hot water furnished.425.00/month. Cail Pete 363-02675136 Harper4 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.330.00month Porter324-4956 fst5120 Harper2.5 room 3.5 room$285/month $380/month| Stove, refrigerator, carpet, heatand hot water, furnished. Keys inI Sack office or call Mirko 288-4391ftThe Sack Realty Company, Inc,1459 east hyde park boulevardChicago, illinois 60615 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 iake, 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 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, modern 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.667-8776(05254 S. Dorchester Ave.Walk to museums, parks, the lakeSTUDIO APARTMENTSFurnished and unfurnishedutilities includedLaundry roomSundeck • Secure buildingCampus bus at our doorCall 9-5 for appointment324-0200 APARTMENTSFOR RENTGRAFF &CHECK1617 E. 53th St.Spacious, newly-decorated 1 Vj, studios &1 bedroom apartmentsin a quiet, well-maintained building.Immediate OccupancyBU8-5566Cfiazlotte ^Ui&stzomczReal Estate Co.CALL ANYTIME493-0666LUXURY CONDOThree to four bedrooms. Spectacularview of lake, huge closets. Threelarge, spotless baths. Historic,restored building. Ten windows on.tenth floor overlook park, lake, city.Fully carpeted, dazzling kitchen. Jog¬ging, 3 free tennis courts, bike trailsalong lake. Close to U of C campus,excellent transportation on 1C or bus.Graceful entry and very, very secure.2,500 square feet of immaculate,graceful living and entertaining.$149,000. Call Charlotte Vikstrom,Vikstrom Real Estate for appointment.493-066622—The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984CLASSIFIEDS: SPACEStudios, one, two & 3 bedrms some lake viewsnear 1C, CTA, U of C shuttle. Laundryfacilities, parking available, heat & water in¬cluded. 5% discounts available for studentsHerbert Realty 684-23339-4:30 Mon. - Fri. TRIO CON BRIO: Music for all occasions;weddings (in Bond Chapel or elsewhere),receptions parties. Classical and popular. 643-5007.52ND AND WOODLAWN2 Bedroom Apartment $5201 Bedroom Apartment $410Apartments remodeled with colors of yourchoice. Close to shopping and transportationClose 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 Company 493-2525SUNNY 4 RM. APT. available Dec. 1 $485 incl.utilities. Sublet w/option to renew 9/85 bet.Blacksfone 8, Dorchester on 53rd street. Call947-8558.GREAT APARTMENT FANTASTIC LOCA¬TION. Sublet 1 yr possibly longer starting Dec84. Unfurnished 2 bdrms & sunporch 5725 S.Kimbark. M Bell 649-8582or 667-0898AVAIL. AFTER THANKSGIVING: 2 BR, 2BATH CONDO with luxurious features. Expos¬ed wood, carpet w/w. Oak cabinets, d8>d plusmicro in kitchen. Elev bldg has sauna, partyroom, pkg lot and great security. Asking $700(negot) 324-4950HISTORIC OGDEN DUNES, INC. 3,300 sq. ft.home. 50 min. from U of C by South ShoreTrain. Remodeled with love in 1983. 2fireplaces, 4 bedrooms, den, 2 kitchens. Largelot with 50 trees. 2 car garage. For sale byowner: $117,500. Call 219^763-4598after 7:00pm.Graduate or professional student wanted toshare coach house on 57th and Woodlawn.Starts immediately. Call Jordan 972-3896 or972 5609 days 947-8420 eve.(Koom) loft apt/firepiace, yrd. 583-3553(message).Artisan renting large unfurnished room, sharefully furnished attractive apartment. M/Fover 25, smokers okay. Jan 1, $265, heat incl.684-6056, till 11:30pm 57th Dorchester.ROOMMATE Neat and Clean. Fireplace.Laundry $169/mo. Call 363-4641Furnished one-bedroom apt to sublet Jan 85 -Jan 86. 56th & Kimbark. Quiet, recentlydecorated. $400. Grad or professional only. Call955-3920 before 10am or after 9:30pm.PEOPLE WANTED_People needed to participate in studies onmemory, perception, and language process¬ing. Learn something about how you carry outthese processes and earn some money at thesame time! Call the Committee on Cognitionand Communication, afternoons at 962-8859.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 60657Healthy Young Men Needed for Donors inUniversity of Chicago Clinical Artificial In¬semination Program. Inquire in confidence at962 6124.Desk Attendent, part-Time 15-20 evening hoursper week as desk attendent for a Hyde Parkresidential building. Call 324-6100.People needed for drug sfudy. Commonlyprescribed drugs only. Simple perceptualtests. Pays $50 Call 962-8846 between 98,5.Financial Clerk for social service agency.Statistical reports for gov't, programs. Min 2yrs college accounting. Salary-$8000 to$9200/yr. 643-4062 Mr. Morone for appt.Part time on campus energy survey positionsavailable $5 per hour flexible hours 10 hoursper week minimum required. Project will startNov 26 and continue through January. CallCarl Kohl 962-3698 Nov 16 or Nov 26 between 9-1for interview.Catering Assistant. Must be personable, flexi¬ble re hours and possess kitchen skills. Mark667 3000.OFFICE: Mail, phones, data-entry. Type50wpm, data-entry experience desired. $5hr,20hr/wk, mornings. Inquiry (resume prefer¬red) to Barry Bowen, Bulletin of the AtomicScientists, 5801 S. Kenwood, Chicago, IL 60637.No phone inquiries, please.I travel to Indianapolis on weekends. Willshare my ride or expenses for yours-contactSteve 753-1711 extension #221.SERVICESJUDITH TYPES-and has a memory. Phone955-4417.UNIVERSITY TYPING SERVICE: A fast, accurate, professional full-timeeditor/typist/word processor (and former col¬lege English prof) using the DisplaywriterSystem. James Bone 363-0522. $12/hour.Moving and Hauling. Discount prices to staffand students from $12/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.PRECISION PLUS TYPING-IBM Word Processor Fast Accurate Service at ReasonableRates. 324-1660PASSPORT PHOTOS WHILE U WAIT ModelCamera 1342 E. 35th St. 4936700 anytime, 743-1353. * / nour' canFAST FRIENDLY TYPING-resumes, papers,all materials. Pick up 8. delivery. Call 924-4449.TYPIST-Exp. College Papers, Turabian-Fast,Accuratereas. rates IBM correcting Selectric643-8606.QUALITY Child Care. Full or part-time, in myhome. Ages 2-5. Nutritious meals provided ifdesired. Educational/creative activities daily.Lots ot love. Experienced pre-schoolteacher/mom. E. Hyde Pk. Blvd. 373-3495.TYPIST: exp/w student papers. Reas: Pickup,delivery on campus. Phone 684-6882.WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY Ourphotography speaks for itself. Make an ap¬pointment and see for yourself. The Better Im¬age 643-6262.Childcare available in my home for details call241-6286 after 5pm.HYDE PARK PSYCHOTHERAPYASSOCIATES can frequently help with anxietyand tension associated with study habits andexam pressures. 288-2244FOR SALESEALY FULL SIZE SETEx-firm inner spring matt. 8. box, brand new,still wrapped, value $325. Sell tor $95. 883-8881.PIANO-BABY GRAND, Smith 8, Barnes circa1915 rebuilt action, a great practice piano forstudent. $1350. Richard 972-8677 daytime.240Z-OLDY BUT GOODY,-71 Datsun, manymiles, some rust, still a classic. $999. Richard972-8677 daytime 643-9165 weekends.79 Dodge Omni 4dr Auto A/c 45k mis goodcond. Best otter 324-1011 after 5pm.Great City Car! '78 Chevette, low miles, newtires, one driver $1000 or offer. 752-3807 or 752-0307.Sat 11/17, 10:30-2:30 kid's books, roller skates,clothes, more hsehold msc, 2 fine oriental rugsbehind 5458 S. Everett, 363-251976 4dr green Rabbit, traitor hitch, roofrack,bikerack 62k mi, rust, cosmetic body damage,runs ok $500 or best reasonable offer 962-8598 or363 2519 eve.As New Selmer Tenor SaAphone. Perfect con¬dition. Yours for $300 less than retail. Alsoavailr Actual old LSAT exams 667-5884 eves.One way air fare Chicago-D.C. $85 use beforeNov. 26 Pablo753-2307 (days) 667-3372 (eve)HEAVEN VINTAGE CLOTHING SALE thisweekend Sat 8. Sun. Nov 17 8. 18 12noon-6p.m.at 6981 N. Sheridan. Don't miss this one.Turkish Gelims-wool, natural dyes, handsomegeometric patterns, approx 6' x 4'. Call 962-9486days or 947-8532 e''e Reasonable prices.SCENESWRITE RS' WORKSHOP Plaza 2-8377INDIAN BRUNCH by Boy Scout Troop 512 atUnited Church of Hyde Park, 53rd 8,Blacksfone, Sat., Nov. 17, llam-3pm. Tradi¬tional Asian dining at special prices: $6 Adult,$3 Kids.Even a klutz can learn dances from EasternEurope, Scandinavia, the Middle East, 8.more. Come to folk dancing 8-9:30 pm for in¬struction 9:30-11 for open dancing, in IdaNoyes, every Mon (beginner) 8. Sun (general)of the quarter. Need no partners. Questionscall Tom 363-5214.Shearson Lehman/American Express wants tomeet you! Monday, November 26 at 4.00 p.m.in the North Lounge of the Reynolds Club.Learn more about investment banking and op¬portunities available with Lehman Brothers.Reception will follow.THE MEDICI DELIVERSDaily from 4 pm call 667-7394.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 from U of C 10% fixed rateCall Joe Macacuso 581-4900 days 8-lOpm nttes434-8234.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.LOXI BAGELS!Hillel has a brunch every Sunday 11 to 1pm at5715 S-Woodlawn. Lox, bagel & cream cheeseplus Sunday Trib, NY Times, coffee, tea 8< OJ -All for $2.00EARN HOLIDAY MONEYSelected volunteers will receive $160.00 for par¬ticipating in a drug preference study. Takestime, but little effort: Tuesday, Thursday andSaturday afternoons, 2:30 6:30pm. Involves on¬ly over the counter or commonly prescribeddrugs. Research is conducted at the Universityof Chicago Medical Center. Call 962 3560,9 00am to noon Monday to Friday. Volunteersmust be between 21 and 35 years of age and inguudhwttfi. DO YOU ENJOY ABEER OR COCKTAILIN THE EVENING?Selected volunteers will receive $160.00 for par¬ticipating in a drug preference study (sevenevenings over a three week period). Takestime, but little effort. Involves only over-the-counter or commonly prescribed, non-experimental drugs. Research is conducted atthe University of Chicago Medical Center. Call962-3560 Monday-Friday between 9:00am andnoon. Volunteers must be between 21 and 35years of age and in good health.SHELVINGAll types made from $15.00 free estimatesdelivery installation Call John 978-3723LESBIAN? BORED?Dance away your blues. Come to the GALADance East Lounge of I-House Saturday Nov 17from 9pm to lam w/U of C ID $3 others.HEALTH/DIETTo purchase and/or become a distributor ofCernitin products including Dick Gregory'sBahamian Diet Drink Mix. Please contactJohn Dunham (312 ) 734-5824.HAVE A PROBLEM?Don't know who to talk to? Try the U of CHotline—We're confindential and also have in¬fo and referrals. Call us 7 days a week 7am to7pm.WRESTLE ALLIGATORSand other fun stuff with the Outing Club. Mshp.$3 Call Steve 753-3444.RENTOR RENTWITHOPTION TO BUY2 bedroom, 2 bath, air-cond. condo at 5401 S.Hyde Park Blvd Southeast corner, Lakeview,w/w carpet, custom-made closets, track light,new shades, new refrigerator and dishwasher.Top quality modern high rise with security,party room, sundeck, low assessment In¬cludes heat. $650.00 per month of $64,900.Please call 363-5292 (eve.) or 962-8787 (day).ATTENTION:MAROON STAFFMaroon staff meeting Sunday night at 7 p.m. inthe Cloister Club. Ida Noyes first floor Therewill be food! PUB CONCERT/DANCESat, Nov YJ, 10-12 TOTAL ECLYPSE.Members, 21+.PROTESTORS...ATword of THANKS to ail the people fromGALA DSA, Women's Union, CollegeDemocrats, Haymarket, and everyone elsewho helped out in all aspects of last week's pro¬test of Archbishop O'Connor's visit. Goodshow.ST. NICHOLAS MARKETUnusual gifts, knits, toys, candies, goodies,Xmas cards, treasures, Santa’s Village, fleamarket, raffle, ethnic lunch. St. Thomas Apos¬tle, 5467 Woodlawn. Sat Dec. 1, 10-4 Sun. Dec 2,9-2. Proceeds restore Landmark Church. 324-2626.AN INVITATIONTO THE DANCEGALA announces the Autumn Dance SaturdayNov 17 at 1-House East Lounge from 9pm tolam $2 w/U of C ID $3 others. All are welcome.SKI TEAM MEETINGFor all interested skiers-come to a brief in¬formational meeting and learn about winterfun. Whether you race or not, want to teamhow or just want to ski, come to Ida Noyes onTuesday, Nov 20 at 7:00. If you can't make it,Call Lisa at 753-8342 xl225 for info.LISA VILLARREALHAPPY BIRTHDAY! And 10E9more to comeLove you!!Brett(Your B.B.)R ESEARCH ASSOCIATEPosition opening for Research Associate incharge of developing and implementingresearch programs/studies on alcohol use andabuse among Asian Americans in thePacific/Asian American Mental HealthResearch Center, University of Illinois atChicago, under a 5-year NIAAA/NIHH grant.Successful candidate will have an MD or PhDin one of the behavioral science or healthresearch areas w/at least 5 years postdoctoralresearch experience. Full time, minimumsalary $30,000, starting date 1/1/85. For fullestconsideration send by 12/7/84 application w/c-v and 3 letters of recommendation to: Dr. SoonKoh Chair-search Committee, P/AAMHRC1001 W Van Buren Chicago IL 60637. The Univof IL isan AA EOE.GmIuk-ni J,KENNEDY. RYAN. MONIGAL & ASSOC.5508 South Lake Park667-6666mmWALK TO CAMPUSIn the heart of Hyde Park. Awell-maintained, modernbuilding with many amenities,careful security.| ;♦♦♦♦holiday bargains****$49,900 for two bedrooms, two baths PLUS AGARAGE SPACE....orSouthwest corner (views of the University spires)two bedroom, two bath unit. Parquet floors inliving room and hall; carpeted bedrooms. Under$50,000. Martha Benson.******* * * *************<KIMBARK SOUTH OF 57TH STREETNew kitchen with disposal and dishwasher.Beautiful buffet in the formal dining room and lotsof stripped woodwork throughout. Woodburningfireplace. Front balcony, back porch. Twobedrooms. Hilde Zurne (684-0151)The Chicago Maroon—Friday, November 16, 1984—23